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Teacht Aniar: Meascra Dánta & Dánta Nua
Book Launch by Dairena Ní Chinnéide with Poetry Ireland
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18 Ballads from Ulysses
Performance by Val O’Donnell
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Walking Tours
Explore James Joyce’s Dublin
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‘Sherlockholmesing’ Leopold Paula Bloom
Lecture by Vincent Altman O’Connor
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Ulysses for All 2025
Literature Course with Dr. Caroline Elbay
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Women and the Making of Ulysses
From the Harry Ransom Collection
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- Teacht Aniar: Meascra Dánta & Dánta Nua
- Ulysses: Illustrations
- 18 Ballads from Ulysses
- Walking Tours
- ‘Sherlockholmesing’ Leopold Paula Bloom
- Ulysses for All 2025
- Modality of the Visible: Ulysses VR
- Mamalujo: Finnegans Wake as a Work in Progress
- Ulysses: An Odyssey
- The Volta Exhibition
- Women and the Making of Ulysses
- Gutter Words
Welcome to the
James Joyce Centre
The James Joyce Centre is an educational charity, museum, and cultural institution which promotes the life, literature and legacy of one of the world’s greatest writers, James Joyce. Situated in a stunning Georgian townhouse in Dublin’s North Inner City, the Centre offers visitors historical and biographical information about James Joyce and his influence upon the literary world. We host walking tours, exhibitions, workshops, and lectures for Joycean scholars as well as the casual visitor. See the door of the famous No. 7 Eccles Street from Ulysses, art exhibitions, and other items that bring the author and his works to life. Participate in our many events, including readings, adaptations, and performances of Joyce’s best loved works.
MAKE A DONATION
Help support our year round programme of events, exhibitions,
outreach and educational activities and the annual Bloomsday Festival.
News Updates

BloomEccles Bound!

Profiles Issue 3

Trailing a Sea-Weed Cord

Poems Ago: ‘Home’

Ulysses
Joyce’s Dublin
The James Joyce Centre is situated near the centre of Dublin City or “the Heart of the Hibernian Metropolis” as Joyce called it in his great work Ulysses. James Joyce once declared that if Dublin “one day suddenly disappeared from the Earth it could be reconstructed out of my book”. Though he would spend most of his life living in Continental Europe, Dublin would be the focus of almost all his major work. As he wrote to his brother Stanislaus on 24 September 1905, nearly a year after leaving Ireland for Italy: “When you remember that Dublin has been a capital for thousands of years, that it is the ‘second’ city of the British Empire, that it is nearly three times as big as Venice, it seems strange that no artist has given it to the world.”
Find Out More
about Joyce’s Dublin