Skip to main content

The Shakespeare and Company Project


The James Joyce Centre was delighted to host Associate Professor Joshua Kotin of Princeton University to discuss his work as director of The Shakespeare and Company Project.

In 1919, an American woman named Sylvia Beach opened an English-language bookshop and lending library in Paris. She called it Shakespeare and Company and it quickly became the meeting place for a community of writers and artists now known as the lost generation. In 1922, Beach published James Joyce’s Ulysses under the Shakespeare and Company imprint, a feat that made her and her bookshop and lending library famous around the world.

The Shakespeare and Company Project is a digital humanities initiative at Princeton that uses Beach’s archives to tell new stories about the lost generation. Founded in 2020, the Project details what members of the bookshop and lending library community read and where they lived. The Project also addresses questions about literary history, offering new insights about Joyce’s readership and the development of modernism.

Prof. Kotin outlined how the Shakespeare and Company Project was made: how archives became data, and how data can illuminate new ways of understanding canonical literature. He also discussed the Project’s many challenges and future goals.

The event was hosted in association with University College Dublin.

More News


Finnegans Wake, Ulster and Partition

Lecture 23 April 2024 at 6:30pm The James Joyce Centre was delighted to host a presentation about James Joyce’s…

When I Think About the Prankquean

Lecture 19 April 2024 at 7:30pm The James Joyce Centre hosted a special lecture and reading by famed Joycean Dr. Jame…

Madeira: The Secrets of Sisters

Reading 17 April 2024 at 1pm The James Joyce Centre in association with the Five Lamps Arts Festival was proud to hos…

Cut & Paste: Remembering Arthur Griffith

Book Launch 28 March 2024 at 4pm The James Joyce Centre was proud to host the launch of the 7th volume of Cut & P…