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In praise of the hellraisers: Lise Hand on the women who shook the system
On 2 February 1922, a book rolled off the printing presses, published in its entirety for the first time. It was the chronicle of a peripatetic day in the life of Leopold Bloom as he strolled the streets of Dublin city, and as he meandered along the byways of his own interior life.
Ulysses was brought into the world on its author’s 40th birthday, its prior serialisation having already established James Joyce’s work as a literary tour de force – or in some scandalised circles, as an obscene travesty.
But Ulysses might have been a different book, had the writer’s path never crossed with that of Nora Barnacle.
On 10 June 1904, 22-year-old Joyce squinted at the figure of a tall redhead as she strode along Nassau Street, arms swinging.
His eyesight was bad, but he could see enough to spur him into action; he approached her, and she agreed to meet him the following Tuesday evening on a corner of Merrion Square.