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Mary Costello on Ithaca

Mary Costello selects an episode full of questions and answers, known as Ithaca. In the passage she chooses, the reader gets a bird's-eye view of the journey of water in Dublin.

Five Irish writers each take a passage from James Joyce’s Ulysses and, through a close reading, explore its meaning and significance within the wider work, as well as what it means to them. Reading Ulysses is a famously challenging experience for most readers, so can our Essayists help?

In the fourth essay of the series, novelist and short story writer Mary Costello selects an excerpt from an episode full of questions and answers, known as Ithaca. The episode sees Leopold Bloom, the novel's main character, and his friend Stephen Dedalus walk back to Bloom's house in the middle of the night.

In the passage which Mary selects, Bloom has got home and turns on the tap to fill the kettle. Mary says that what follows is a "magnificent, bird's eye view of the water's journey from County Wicklow" all the way through the city to the Mr Bloom's sink. Mary argues that Ithaca is compelling not just because of the maths, science and language contained within it but also because of the fuller picture it paints of Mr Leopold Bloom.

First broadcast in February 2022 to mark a centenary since the novel's publication.

Presenter: Mary Costello
Producer: Camellia Sinclair

Available now

14 minutes

Last on

Thu 18 Jan 2024 22:45

Broadcasts

  • Thu 3 Feb 2022 22:45
  • Thu 18 Jan 2024 22:45

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