Paris-Zurich-Trieste: Joyce l'European
Seriously...
BBC
4.1 • 885 Ratings
🗓️ 1 February 2022
⏱️ 60 minutes
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Summary
The Irish cultural industries have in recent decades managed to turn James Joyce into a valuable tourist commodity - 'a cash machine', 'the nearest thing we've got to a literary leprechaun.' Joyce would surely have disapproved. "When the soul of man is born in this country," he wrote, "there are nets flung at it to hold it back from flight. You talk to me of nationality, language, religion. I shall try to fly by those nets." That is precisely what he did, leaving Ireland behind and living more than half his life across Continental Europe. As Anthony Burgess put it, "Out there in Europe the modernistic movement was stirring," and by placing himself in the cultural cross-currents of cities like Trieste, Rome, Zurich, Paris & Pola, where he experienced the early rumblings of Dada, Psychoanalysis, Futurism et al, Joyce became a part of an endlessly plural social and linguistic explosion, far removed from the monolithic oppressiveness of Ireland. Backed up by interviewees including Colm Tóibín, John McCourt and Liv Monaghan and illustrated by rich archive recordings, Andrew Hussey argues it was the deliberate rupture of leaving home - taking up "the only arms I know - silence, exile and cunning" - that allowed Joyce to develop the necessary breadth of vision and literary skill to write his greatest works. The Dublin of Ulysses itself becomes, according to Tóibín, 'a Cosmopolis... another great port city like Trieste." For Hussey, who has himself lived and worked as a writer in Paris for many years, Joyce was not only a great pathfinder, he also offers an inspiring trans-national vision of Europe and the world just at a time when borders are tightening and the darker shades of nationalism are once again looming large. Produced by Geoff Bird
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This was an impregnable fortress. The only way you get out was in a wooden box. |
| 0:05.0 | The controversial maximum security prison impossible to escape from. |
| 0:09.0 | And one of the duties of a political prisoner is the escape. |
| 0:12.0 | The IRA inmates who found a way. of a political prisoner is the escape. |
| 0:12.5 | The IRA inmates who found a way. |
| 0:14.5 | I'm Carlo Gableer and I'll be navigating a path |
| 0:19.5 | through the disturbing inside story of the biggest jailbreak in British and Irish history. |
| 0:25.0 | The narrative that they want is that this is a big achievement by them. |
| 0:28.5 | Escape from the maze, listen first on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:35.0 | BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, Music Radio Podcasts. |
| 0:39.0 | Welcome to Seriously from BBC Radio 4. |
| 0:43.2 | I'm Vanessa Kasule. |
| 0:44.7 | Each week this podcast brings you two of the best documentaries that audio world has to offer. |
| 0:50.7 | Here comes something unusual, charming and seriously fascinating. |
| 0:56.0 | The thing I'd like to know most of all. |
| 0:59.0 | What was the mind of Joyce? |
| 1:02.0 | His last words were that he said does nobody understand me and I'm |
| 1:07.3 | afraid that's but none of us did understand him. |
| 1:10.3 | Well you know don't feel Kennett or haven't I told you every telling has a |
| 1:14.5 | tailing and that's the he and the she is it look look the dusk is growing my |
| 1:19.5 | branches lofty are taken root and my chair's gurn ashm. |
| 1:24.6 | James Joyce, author of Ulysses and Finningon's wake, was born in February 1882 in Dublin City. He was the most devout literary craftsman of his century, the playboy of the Western |
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