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James Joyce interest St. Stephen's, A Record of University Life, Dublin

Currency:EUR Category:Collectibles Start Price:0.00 EUR Estimated At:700.00 - 900.00 EUR
James Joyce interest St. Stephen's, A Record of University Life, Dublin

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Auction Date:2012 Apr 21 @ 12:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
10.75 by 8 in.




Vol Number I, nos 1-3 [of 7]. Original printed wrappers, the 3 issues contained in a later cloth box, gilt morocco lettering-piece. When the Irish Literary Theatre regressed, as Joyce perceived it, towards a more 'Irish' drama with productions of Douglas Hyde's Irish-language Casadh-an-tSugáin and Yeats and George Moore's Diarmuid and Grania, the young writer's violent reaction was 'The Day of the Rabblement', fulminating that: 'The Irish Literary Theatre gave out that it was the champion of progress, and proclaimed war against commercialism and vulgarity [... but the devil of the popular will] has prevailed once more, and the Irish Literary Theatre must now be considered the property of the rabblement of the most belated race in Europe' . Joyce submitted his essay to Hugh Kennedy, an established adversary and the editor of St. Stephen's, who in turn consulted Father Henry Browne (the magazine's advisor); Browne rejected the essay because of a reference to D'Annunzio's Il Fuoce, which was listed in the Index librorum prohibitorum (list of publications prohibited by the Catholic Church). Concurrent with Joyce's troubles, his friend Sheehy-Skeffington was encountering similar obstacles in his efforts to publish his essay 'A Forgotten Aspect of the University Question'. Skeffington's essay proposed equal status for women at the university. Since both essays were rejected by St. Stephen's for different reasons, Joyce and Sheehy-Skeffington determined to publish them privately and the two pieces were yoked together and printed in an edition of 85 copies, prefaced by the statement 'These two essays were commissioned by the Editor of St. Stephen's for that paper, but were subsequently refused by the Censor'.