Blooms & Barnacles - podcast cover

Blooms & Barnacles

A blog and podcast that discuss James Joyce's Ulysses from a non-academic point of view. Less snooty, more movie references.
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Altman the Saltman (w/ Vincent Altman O'Connor)

In our last episode , we discussed people from James Joyce’s life who influenced the creation of Leopold Bloom. However, we left one question unanswered - why were none of these men from Dublin? Didn’t Joyce know any Jewish people in Dublin? Vincent Altman O’Connor’s research into this very question and the biography of his grandfather Albert Altman may very well be the answer to this riddle. Topics discussed in this episode include Glasnevin’s many Joycean connections, the story of Albert Altma...

Feb 24, 20211 hr 1 minEp. 62

Who Was the Real Leopold Bloom?

James Joyce based many characters in Ulysses on friends, family, acquaintances, and enemies, but what about Leopold Bloom? Who were the real people in Joyce’s life who inspired the creation of one of literature’s greatest protagonists? Topics in this episode include people who Joyce thought looked like Leopold Bloom, the story of Alfred Hunter, why Joyce chose the address 7 Eccles St., how many pounds are in a stone, the inspiration for Bloom’s kindly-curious personality, Ettore Schmitz (Italo S...

Feb 10, 202156 minEp. 61

The Holy Office

They both lived in a Martello Tower, sure, but what else do James Joyce and Bono have in common? We take a short break from analyzing Ulysses to take a look at one of Joyce’s early poems - “The Holy Office.” If you love 100+ year old gossip, strap in! This one gets dishy. Topics include the significance of the year 1904 in James Joyce’s life, the Irish Literary Revival, a young Joyce’s penchant for writing angry poetry, Joyce’s desire for artistic Truth rather than mere aesthetics, why you shoul...

Jan 27, 20211 hr 10 minEp. 60

Rere Regardant

This episode’s passage comes from p. 50-51 in my edition of Ulysses (1990 Vintage International), and covers the passage beginning “Come. I thirst.” and ending “…a silent ship.” We did it!!! We finally finished “Proteus”! We’re covering the last page of Ulysses’ third episode this week. Topics include Dermot’s love of tall ships and the Master and Commander novels, why a ship isn’t always a ship, Biblical allusions galore, why Stephen invokes Lucifer, cockle hats and sandal shoon, how Stephen ta...

Jan 13, 202159 minEp. 59

Barnacle Goose and Featherbed Mountain

How exactly does God become a featherbed mountain? What the heck is a featherbed mountain? We answer these questions and more in this episode of Blooms & Barnacles ! Topics covered in this episode include Dermot’s hot take on Richard Dawkins, Renaissance magic, theosophy, metempsychosis, Dublin seagulls, linear v. cyclical world-views, Dermot takes on Jared Diamond, consubstantiality, the Stephen seeks freedom from his father, the ichthys symbol, minnows eating spongy titbits, Hamlet , the l...

Dec 30, 20201 hr 2 minEp. 58

Full fathom five thy father lies.

The end is nigh. Kelly and Dermot discuss in the depth the drowning motif of “Proteus”. Other topics include The Tempest and Ariel’s Song, the wily nature of the sea, Stephen’s estrangement from his father Simon, the role of alcohol in the lives of Ulysses characters, quitting alcohol, rising corpses, sea change, porpoises, the ancient Egyptian Book of Thoth, spongy titbits, Stephen’s connection to a corpse, looking for a way out of a suffocating home life, why Buck Mulligan is a terrible friend...

Dec 16, 20201 hr 4 minEp. 57

Fourworded Wavespeech

**If you’re unfamiliar with the peeing Calvin decal (or if you are), here’s the story . The divine and the profane live side by side in Ulysses . In this episode, we discuss what the heck Cock Lake is, why Stephen pees on the strand at the end of “Proteus”, the themes of generation and corruption in “Proteus”, the artistic merits of excrement, urination as an expression of freedom and creativity, Mother Grogan and her teapot, endowing waves with speech and animating the natural world, onomatopoe...

Dec 02, 202059 minEp. 56

Cranly's Arm

Kelly helps Dermot remember why he drew James Joyce wearing red, killer heels. Topics include subtle Homeric correspondences, Dermot’s allegiance to Mr. Kipling’s cakes, Stéphane Mallarmé’s ‘L'après-midi d'un faune’ (The afternoon of a faun), more ire directed at that mocker Buck Mulligan, Stephen’s tiny feet, Stephen’s erstwhile friendship with Cranly, Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas, John Francis Byrne, Cranly’s feelings for Stephen, Wilde’s love that dare not speak its name, themes of mas...

Nov 18, 20201 hrEp. 55

What is that word known to all men?

Kelly and Dermot take on a deceptively simple passage in “Proteus” as they attempt to answer that ultimate question - what is the word known to all men? Topics covered in this episode include Stephen’s loneliness and why Joyce felt it was necessary for him to be totally alone, a mysterious discrepancy in Ulysses ’ various editions, the 1984 Gabler edition of Ulysses , the universal Truth of a mother’s love, the universal Truth of death, how to escape from a troublesome duality, Rawhead and Blood...

Nov 05, 202048 minEp. 54

The Virgin at Hodges Figgis' Window

Dermot and Kelly carry on discussing “Proteus” in their flutiest voices! Topics in this episode include: yet more discussion of the philosophy of the good bishop of Cloyne, George Berkeley, shovel hats, the fluttering of the veil between the material world and the metaphysical world, Dermot’s grudge against Bertrand Russell, how language obscures one’s perception of the material world, the heraldic system of hatching, Stephen playing with his stereoscopic vision, Stephen’s ideal woman, Hodges Fi...

Oct 21, 202059 minEp. 53

A Reign of Uncouth Stars

Form of my form! Who watches me here? Kelly and Dermot wade into the final pages of “Proteus” to spend some time with old faves like Aristotle, Bishop Berkeley and Giordano Bruno. We dig deeper into Stephen Dedalus’ internal monologue while discussing Stephen’s concern for his future legacy, Stephen’s shadow, darkness shining in the brightness, the squid people of Procyon 5, the Delta of Cassiopeia, Roman augury, Giordano Bruno’s belief that the constellations were morally corrupt, and the writt...

Oct 07, 202054 minEp. 52

Omnis Caro Ad Te Veniet

Kelly and Dermot discuss one of the most metal passages in all of Ulysses ! You can find it at the end of “Proteus” beginning with “A side eye at my Hamlet hat.” Topics include Hamlet (so much Hamlet ), Stephen’s creative spark, more resent for Buck Mulligan, more grief for Stephen’s mother, the shifting protean nature of language and tides, various Biblical allusions, Stephen’s poem, Percy Bysshe Shelley’s Hellas , Dermot’s grudge against Galileo, the philology of colors, did the sea really loo...

Sep 09, 20201 hrEp. 51

The Birth of Ulysses (w/ Phil Holden)

We welcome Phil Holden to the podcast to talk about the early publishing of history of Ulysses . Phil is a collector of early Ulysses editions, so he shares his collection while telling the arduous tale of getting a book like Ulysses published in the first place, the role played by Sylvia Beach and Shakespeare and Company in publishing Ulysses , concerns about obscenity, pirate editions of Ulysses , books as art objects, the complications caused by Joyce’s early manuscripts, and who should play ...

Aug 26, 20201 hr 26 minEp. 50

O, My Dimber Wapping Dell

White thy fambles, Red thy gan! Wait, what? Find out what this phrase and much more means in this episode as we continue our discussion of "Proteus," the third episode in James Joyce's Ulysses . Topics covered in this show include: what Stephen means by "red Egyptians," background on the Romani and Irish Travellers, Stephen's class insecurity, Terry Pratchett's Mort , strolling morts more generally, the distinct language of Romani and the Travellers, The Our Father in Shelta , the secret languag...

Aug 12, 20201 hrEp. 49

Haroun al-Raschid's Melons

Kelly and Dermot take a look at Stephen Dedalus' prophetic dream in "Proteus." Topics discussed include James Joyce's fascination with dream analysis, Stephen's connection to the mysterious Akasic record, Dermot's own experience with slippery time, the location of the "street of harlots" in Dublin, how Leopold Bloom and Haroun al-Raschid are connected, Orientalism, almosting, and prolonged provocative melonsmellonous osculation. You can hear our episode about translating Finnegans Wake into Japa...

Jul 29, 20201 hrEp. 48

Tatters

Kelly and Dermot talk dogs, specifically Tatters, the dog encountered by Stephen on the strand at Sandymount. Topics include Joyce's belief that the dog is the most protean creature, Tatters' many forms on the seashore, cocklepickers then and now, seamorse, heraldry, Stephen's many phobias, reincarnation, sea gods, the ninth wave, pards, the Buddha-nature of a dog, cameos by Nicolas Cage and Peter Falk, Tatters as a muse, Tatters as a Zen master, Stephen's struggle with duality, Stephen's creati...

Jul 15, 202057 minEp. 47

Paradise of Pretenders

Sweny's Patreon helps keep this marvelous Dublin landmark alive. Please subscribe ! On the Blog: Decoding Dedalus: Pretenders Dogsbody Social Media: Facebook | Twitter Subscribe to Blooms & Barnacles : iTunes | Google Play Music | Stitcher Further Reading: Atura, A. & Dionne, L. Proteus - Modernism Lab. Retrieved from https://modernism.coursepress.yale.edu/proteus/ Delaney, F. (2012, Dec 18). Episode 132: Barking at Boccaccio. Re:Joyce. [Audio podcast]. Gifford, D., & Seidman, R. J. ...

Jul 01, 202048 minEp. 46

Bloomsday 2020 Supplement

Enjoy a late submission for our Bloomsday episode! Check out the full episode here .

Jun 22, 20209 min

Bloomsday 2020

Sweny's Patreon helps keep this marvelous Dublin landmark alive. Please subscribe ! Social Media: Facebook | Twitter Subscribe to Blooms & Barnacles : iTunes | Google Play Music | Stitcher Many thanks to our readers: Richard Feeney , " Telemachus ," 7:10 Jane Davis, " Telemachus ," 12:50 Andrew Basquille , " Nestor ," 17:47 Steve Carey , " Calypso ," 25:42 Bill Kennedy, " Calypso ," 31:48 PJ Murphy , "The Lotus Eaters," 39:47 Shelby Haber, Krystal Bressmer Cam Edwards, and Vidu Morugama, "Ha...

Jun 16, 20203 hr 14 minEp. 45

Galleys of the Lochlanns

Kelly and Dermot set sail for the time of Vikings and jerkiness dwarfs! They discuss the differences of similarly-shaped seafaring vessels, Lochlanns, Fr. Dineen's Irish dictionary, the intersection of Viking and Celtic cultures in Ireland, torcs, tomahawk, the horrors of 14th c. Dublin, famine, plague and slaughters, the story of the time a pod of cetaceans washed ashore in medieval Dublin, the story of the time the Liffey froze over and people grilled on top of it, Stephen as a changeling, Ste...

Jun 03, 202052 minEp. 44

Panthersahib and Pointer

**Now accepting submissions for our Bloomsday 2020 episode. ** Sweny's Patreon helps keep this marvelous Dublin landmark alive. Please subscribe ! On the Blog: Dogsbody Form of Forms Social Media: Facebook | Twitter Subscribe to Blooms & Barnacles : iTunes | Google Play Music | Stitcher Further Reading: Budgen, F. (1972). James Joyce and the making of Ulysses, and other writings. London: Oxford University Press. Retrieved from http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?...

May 20, 202059 minEp. 43

Under the Walls of Clerkenwell

Dermot and Kelly take on some of the history behind the tale of Irish exile Kevin Egan. This episode's discussion covers the story of the 1867 Clerkenwell explosion, what that has to do with Kevin Egan, Egan's relationship to his wife and son, Dermot's relationship to Tayto crisps, Egan's memories of Kilkenny, the Berkeleyan quality of memory, more father-son angst, and a cautionary tale for young Stephen. Sweny's Patreon helps keep this marvelous Dublin landmark alive. Please subscribe ! On the...

May 06, 202056 minEp. 42

Froggreen Wormwood

Images of early morning Paris through the ineluctable modality of Stephen Dedalus' memory, smells of incense and absinthe. We discuss Stephen's life as a starving artist (literally), Kevin Egan and his unwilling exile in Paris, Egan's real life counterpart, New York Times write-ups of duels in the 19th century, Irish nationalist groups of the 19th century, the proper way to drink absinthe, dalcassians and Arthur Griffith, Maud Gonne, Édouard Drumont v. Léo Taxil, and the pitfalls of attempting t...

Apr 22, 202057 minEp. 41

Boul' Mich'

Bon soir, mes amis, et bienvenue a Blooms et Barnacles! Kelly and Dermot discuss Joyce's disastrous sojourn to Paris as a youth and its parallels to Stephen Dedalus' recollections of his time in Paris. Discussion topics include the fin de siècle fashion of French symbolist poets, what exactly mou en civet is, Stephen feeling down and out in a French post office, the mockery of saints in Heaven, Stephen's collection of French pornography, and whether it was Stephen's mother or his nother mentione...

Apr 08, 202057 minEp. 40

C'est le pigeon, Joseph.

Stephen Dedalus learns the value of gentlemanly blasphemy in this episode of Blooms & Barnacles. Our hero evades the nets of his oppressors while recalling a conversation with a friend in Paris. Topics include the changing face of Ringsend, the Pigeonhouse, Stephen's epiphanies and the Epiphany, Dermot speaking French, what Jules Michelet doesn't know about women, absinthe, the elaborate blasphemies of Leo Taxil's pornographic pope period, Baphomet, the freemasons, and the greatest trick eve...

Mar 25, 202047 minEp. 39

Pico della Mirandola like.

This episode of Blooms & Barnacles takes an esoteric twist as we continue deeper into "Proteus", Ulysses' third episode. Topics include: why Dermot is not impressed with the Library of Alexandria, the length of a mahamanvantara, what the heck a mahamanvantara is, Joyce's youthful rage put into poetry, Joyce's youthful interest in theosophy, Pico della Mirandola's desire to speak to angels, Renaissance magic, hermeticism, , correspondences in Ulysses, and why Dermot thinks Neil de Grasse Tyso...

Mar 12, 202048 minEp. 38

Who is this Dan Occam fellow, anyway?

Dermot and Kelly tickle your brain with Stephen Dedalus' thoughts on the Eucharist, William of Occam, hypostasis, consubstantiation, transubstantiation... we've got it all! Other major philosophical queries discussed include: How can so much bread and wine all become Christ's body and blood. Does Stephen really understand hypostasis.When does soup become soup? Is it immoral to impersonate a priest as long as you don't hear someone's confession? Sweny's Patreon helps keep this marvelous Dublin la...

Feb 27, 202044 minEp. 37

The Complex Life of Lucia Joyce- (w/Linus Ignatius & Llewie Nuñez)

Linus Ignatius and Llewie Nuñez starred in the play Lucia Mad as James and Lucia Joyce, respectively, back in their university days. They drop by the podcast for a deep dive into the complex and tragic life of James Joyce's daughter Lucia. We discuss how they prepared to portray the Joyces on-stage, Lucia's genius as an artist, her struggle with mental illness, the stigma she faced within the Joyce family, her influence on Finnegans Wake and the relationship between Joyce and his daughter. Sweny...

Feb 13, 20201 hr 16 minEp. 36

The Hundredheaded Rabble

Join Kelly and Dermot for a story about James Joyce's youthful rebellion against the literary establishment of Dublin, his obsession with the apocalyptic predictions of a 12th century monk, a tale of psychic horror by W.B. Yeats, Jonathan Swift and Dublin's oldest public library . It's a jam-packed episode! Bonus : Dermot interviews Kelly about completing her blog series about "Proteus." Check out those blog posts here . Double Bonus : The difference between Elisha and Elijah from Chuck Knows Ch...

Jan 30, 202048 minEp. 35
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android