James Joyce Statue in Dublin
This statue dedicated to James Joyce is along O’Connell Street in Dublin
The other James Joyce statue on Henry St Dublin
Dublin Spire and James Joyce statue
What James Joyce statue watch in Dublin today.
IRELAND | Dublin's James Joyce Tower & Museum
Produced by Jim Albritton | The James Joyce Tower and Museum is a Martello tower in Sandycove, Dublin, where Joyce spent six nights in 1904. It's the opening setting of Joyce's book, Ulysses. The tower and museum, open 365 days a year, sit next to the famous Forty Foot Beach. |
Live Statue Dublin Ireland HD
Live Statue Dublin Ireland, cool street performence - art, james joyce, hd, lol
look at the supprised people ; )
A 'Ulysses' Tour of Dublin
A video tour of Dublin during Bloomsday Week 2013 from Steve Cole of the LiberateUlysses project. Some of the sights and people I've experience wandering in search of 'Ulysses' this week.
James Joyce sculpture found on Henry street, Dublin 2014
James Joyce sculpture found on Henry street, Dublin 2014
Guide to Oscar Wilde, James Joyce And More Dublin Literary Spots
Take our guided tour through some of Dublin's famous literary spots.
Transcription:
Welcome to Bunratty Castle and Folk Park. We're going to be going back in time and seeing how bread is made, we're going to be talking about how butter is made and we're even going to meet an old schoolteacher from a hundred years ago.
Welcome to Bunratty Folk Park.
Thanks very much.
What is this house?
This is actually the Golden Vale house.
Oh right.
And this was depicted from around the 1850's.
And you're going to do a demonstration.
I am. I'm going to make porter cakes. They're actually fruit cakes and what we use is the Guinness or the porter as it was known. And I have Guinness. ANd I have raisins. And I have sultanas. I've mixed peel and some brown sugar. So there's Guinness in the pot and a little bit in myself. We always have to balance it up. Yeah. Very important, do you know because I'd be afraid in case the Guinnessmight go off. You want to make sure it tastes good.
No food processors in those days. No, no. And I tell you, you didnt need to go to the gym either. Because you're getting plenty of exercise. I supposet the alcohol content goes out of it when you cook it. It does. So you don't have to worry. If you have a slice of that, you can ride a bike or go into a car or catch a horse or whatever.
And long ago actually, if someone came into the house, they would stir it around as well, you know.
Is that a hint?
Yeah
Is that a hint for us?
This is one I made earlier. Its a lovely porter cake.
Beautiful
Yes, it smells unbelievable.
So there's eating and drinking now in that.
It smells beautiful, yeah.
Well, thanks very much
You're very welcome.
So, we're just outside the fisherman's cottage so its a kind of humble setting and we're about to see how butter is made.
Hello Jacinta, how are you? I was just wondering what are you going to do today here?
I'm going to make some butter.
Oh, lovely
So, we have our cream
And how long roughly would you have to spend doing this?
Fifteeen minutes
Fifteen minutes. I was expecting you to say an hour.
Oh no, no
You'd probably have different muscles on different arms.
I could give you a hand if you want
Yeah, do you want to take over yourself?
So you've got different churns, you've got this one. You've got the pounder
The larger one
And you've got the one. You can see it there on the window. Its for a family that might have only one cow. And its just a small little hand one with the glass
Was butter a luxury?
Yes, that was a luxury.
Then butter went a long way
I'm getting tired now
Do you go home and make your own butter
I do not
Laughter
That's where the cream will go in and the bottom is where it'll come out. It doesnt say where it was made. Its very old though.
The butter. Now, there's your butter. And there's your buttermilk.
So this is the final product
So we're going to visit an old tyle schoolhouse now from the nineteenth century. And talk to the head teacher. Just about what education back then was all about.
So this school was open in 18...I've already forgotten. I'd get an F if I wrer in your class.
I'd have to punish you. It would hurt me more than it would hurt you.
Now they were built in 1835 to teach the boys agriculture and to stop Irish because we were ruled by England as you know back in them times. And the English and the clergy had agreed that the best way forward was to speak English. Which turned out to be very good. Because the Irish emigrated and left here and went to New York and Australia. It was tough. They were'nt welcome anywhere.But thank God, they could speak Englsh. They learnt it in schools.
Actually thatd be very very useful to me because you'd ring the bell every morning.
And they'd sit in on the same classes or they'd have their own subjects.
The girls were here and the boys were here. The teacher taught agriculture, he taught religion and he taught English. You might know how high the windows were. Becasue they had thought of that. That was to stop the children looking out the windows so they'd concentrate on their lessons. Because agriculture was awfully important. Because if you couldnt survive off the land, you could'nt survive. Agriculture was everything
So there wouldnt be an ass big enough to get that lovely girl to school every day.
The teacher had a total on that day of one hundred and sixty students.
Wow
One teacher
Between these two rooms
Now he would have this thing I have in my hand. We called this the bata, the stick. There was total silence. You actually learnt in your first week in school if I keep quiet and dont cause my teacher any problem, I wont have any problem with the teacher. Because he was trying to teach. Because these were hard times. Tough times.
Thanks very much for talking to me.
Lovely Grainne and welcome to Belvoir.
The famous porter cake that we made earlier. Mmmm. Cheers to the nineteenth century
James Joyce Dublin
Located in dublin city center
Dublin statues (and their nicknames)
There's a long tradition of giving nicknames to the statues around Dublin, and so we at Storymap decided to put together a little video with all of the nicknames we know of. Some are crude, some are very witty, and all show a healthy disrespect for the past. For Dublin stories visit storymap.ie
Episode VI HADES -- Presented by Jessica Peel-Yates
'As you are now so once were we.' Twelve mourners and a mysterious man in a macintosh pray at the graveside at Glasnevin Cemetery. Thirteen in total.
Presented by Jessica Peel-Yates atitagain.ie
Check out the new Bloomsday Survival Kit @
Shot by Albert Hooi
Edited by Mark O'Toole @ Media Coop
Produced by Brian Herron for the James Joyce Centre
Music: Kevin MacLeod, Blue Paint. Used under the Creative Commons License.
Book: Ulysses, Dublin Illustrated Edition, The O'Brien Press, 2013
Thanks to the Department of the Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Dublin City Council, Bob Joyce, Mark Traynor, Yvonne Thunder, Gavin Joyce, Katherine McSharry, The Gathering, The Department of Foreign Affair, The O'Brien Press, The board and staff of the James Joyce Centre, Dublin.
【K】Ireland Travel-Dublin[아일랜드 여행-더블린]작가 제임스 조이스 문화센터/James Joyce Centre/Culture
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
■ The Travels of Nearly Everywhere! 10,000 of HD world travel video clips with English subtitle! (Click on 'subtitles/CC' button)
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[한국어 정보]
작가 박물관 인근에 ‘제임스 조이스 문화센터’가 있다. 더블린 태생의 조이스는 더블린을 배경으로 ‘더블린 사람들’, ‘젊은 예술가의 초상’, ‘율리시스’ 같은 작품들을 썼다. 율리시스를 쓰면서 더블린 지도, 전화번호부, 신문 등을 참조했다. 조이스가 ‘더블린이 파괴된다면 내 작품으로 재생시킬 수 있을 것이다.’라고 말할 정도로 더블린의 모습이 세밀하게 그려져 있다. 조이스는 길에서 본 노라 버나클에게 한눈에 반했다. 그는 노라와 첫 데이트를 한 6월 16일을 ‘율리시스’의 배경이 되는 날로 삼았다. 매년 이 센터에서는 ‘제임스 조이스 여름학교’가 개최된다. 조이스 연구자들이 강의와 세미나를 열어 조이스의 작품을 재조명한다.
[English: Google Translator]
Writers Museum has a 'James Joyce Cultural Centre, located nearby. Joyce was born in Dublin in Dublin Background 'Dublin people', 'Portrait of a Young Artist, Ulysses' wrote such works. Ulysses was writing a reference to the Dublin map, phone book, newspaper, etc. Joyce 'if Dublin were destroyed will be able to play with my work. The appearance of the Dublin finely drawn, so to say. Joyce to Nora at a glance infatuation Bernardino larger this on the road. He took the day that Nora and the background of a June 16 the first date 'Ulysses'. The center is held every year, James Joyce Summer School. Joyce researchers lectures and seminars open to refocus the work of Joyce.
[Information]
■클립명: 유럽105-아일랜드01-04 작가 제임스 조이스 문화센터/James Joyce Centre/Culture
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 박인규 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2007년 7월 July
[Keywords]
유럽,Europe,,아일랜드,Ireland,,,박인규,2007,7월 July
Following in the footsteps of the characters of James Joyce
(20 Jun 2009)
Dublin, Ireland, 16 June 2009
1. Mid shot four people in period costume
2. Close up two people in period costume
3. Mid shot reveLlers on street
Dublin, Ireland, 13 June 2009
4. Mid shot breakfast buffet
5. Close up breakfast dinner plate
6. Wide shot people at table eating breakfast
7. Mid shot two women eating breakfast
8. Close up woman at table with Guinness
9. Wide shot diners with actors performing in background
10. Mid shot actor performing, UPSOUND (English): Come up you fearful Jesuit. The mockery of it! Your absurd name - an ancient Greek. My name is absurd too - Malachy Mulligan.
11. Set up Senator David Norris
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Senator David Norris, Joyce scholar:
He confronted the realities of life - the whole human body in all its richness, embarrassment, sensuality. He was one of the first writers to tell the truth about human sexuality. He is so rich, so committed, so single-minded in his devotion to being a priest of the eternal imagination.
Dublin, Ireland, 16 June 2009
13. Mid shot poster of James Joyce
14. Close shot poster of Joyce
15. Mid shot display of Joyce books
16. Close shot of Joyce books
17. Wide shot exterior of James Joyce centre
18. Mid shot man seated at table offering walking tours
19. Close up leaflets advertising walking tours
20. Wide shot actor/tour guide performing UPSOUND (English): Prelude, scene 13. 'He went forward three paces on tripping bee's feet. Tout le monde, en avant, reverance. Tout le monde en place.' It was thanks to the connection with McGuiny that number 35 was saved from demolition and became the James Joyce centre.
21. Mid shot actor/tour guide performing UPSOUND (English): So, on we go. It looks like we've collected a fair few followers so I'll be the pied piper. Come on, come on.
22. Mid shot of three men chatting
23. SOUNDBITE (English) James Quinn, Head tour guide at James Joyce Centre, Dublin:
It's very much a city celebration if you like - Joyce's whole aim with Ulysses was to present the city of Dublin to the literary world if you like and so he's done that by taking in all these various locations throughout a single day in the city's life.
24. Wide shot of tour guide crossing road with tourists
25. SOUNDBITE (English), Paul O'Hanrihan, Director of Ballonatics street theatre group:
The idea of Bloomsday - and the Balloonatics Bloomsday in particular, is to take Joyce's words out onto the streets which are so vividly described in Joyce's work.
26. Wide Senator David Norris joking with Paul O'Hanrihan, UPSOUND (English): And he looks the part, doesn't he? He looks like something out of a pornographic novel, by a seedy drunken Irishman, published by a lesbian bookseller in Paris called Sylvia Beach in 1922. Off my street you dirt bird! (laughs).
27. Wide shot Paul O'Hanrihan, Director of Ballonatics street theatre group, performing on street UPSOUND (English): A light snack in Davy Byrnes - had a good breakfast. Eat or be eaten - kill, kill.
28. Mid shot bar sign
29. Mid shot Bloomsday Lunch menu on blackboard
30. Mid shot people at table in pub
31. Close up woman eating
32. Wide shot Joyce statue
33. Close up statue's face
34. Wide shot bridge over river Liffey in Dublin
35. Wide shot city street
LEAD IN:
Each June Dublin celebrates its annual Bloomsday Festival, an homage to James Joyce's novel Ulysses.
Thousands of Joyce enthusiasts descend on the Irish capital, many dressed in period costumes and reading lines from Joyce's most famous novel.
The 10-day festival offers cultural activities including Ulysses dramatisations as well as tours of many of the places featured in the novel.
STORYLINE:
James Joyce is one of Ireland's best known - and most controversial - writers.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Alchemy Tours James Joyce
This is a brief history of James Joyce brought to you by Neal Doherty of alchemytours.ie.
It is filmed at the James Joyce statue on Talbot st in Dublin city centre.
James Joyce Tower & Museum in Dun Laoghaire Dublin
James Joyce Tower & Museum in Dun Laoghaire Dublin
Jump on the DART commuter train down the coast from Dublin and visit this museum, it's free and has some very interesting displays
Statues of Dublin
Statues of Dublin with Patrick Treacy
James Joyce Sculptures - Edwin Ryan
This is a montage of an old series of sculptures and medallions based on the James Joyce theme. The seated Joyce was reproduced in cold cast bronze for a limited edition , the medallions through the Irish Times © Collection and the standing Joyce is an edition of 9, one of which is on display in Fitzgerald's of Sandycove, Dublin.
all images, music & text - Edwin Ryan, 2009 ©
Literary Dublin 2011
An introduction to the literary city of Dublin, designated in 2010.
Dublin; Literary Spots; Oscar Wilde & James Joyce
Visit for more.
Take our brief walking tour guide through some of Dublin's literary spots.
Transcription:
Here we are in Merrion Square, just outside the childhood home of Dublin's most famous writer, Oscar Wilde. In his own words, the only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.
So here I am right beside the statue of Oscar Wilde, looking very smug indeed. To quote the man, I have nothing to declare except my genius.
We're right beside Sweny's, the old lemon soap shop. You can see the lemon soap here in the window, visited by a character in Ulysees, written by James Joyce himself. And now they still have readings of Joyce's work in this old soap shop which is now a book shop.
One should either be a work of art or wear a work of art.
In 2011, I travelled through China. I started off in Bejing. And worked my way down to Yunan province.
All art is quite useless (Oscar Wilde)
When I die Dublin will be written in my heart.
Oscar Wilde Memorial Statue & His Childhood Home In Dublin
The comedy and tragedy of Oscar Wilde is preserved in a Dublin park, captured in a sculpture of colourful stone.While just across the road is his childhood home.
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