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  1. Nora Barnacle (21 March 1884 – 10 April 1951) was the muse and wife of Irish author James Joyce. Barnacle and Joyce had their first romantic outing in 1904 on a date celebrated worldwide as "Bloomsday" after his modernist novel Ulysses .

  2. Jul 14, 2017 · No longer do we see the same kind of passion. Instead, Joyce’s letters speak of marital difficulties caused by his financial position and a shift toward a more dutiful kind of love for his wife. Joyce died in 1941 at just 58.

    • Joyce and Nora were not married when they eloped in 1904 and didn’t marry until 1931. Though bohemian in some attitudes, the Joyces lived a fairly conventional life.
    • Nora and Joyce moved relentlessly throughout their lives: sometimes evicted, sometimes living in borrowed accommodation, sometimes having to flee to keep safe.
    • James Joyce was an English teacher. He taught at the Berlitz schools in Trieste and the Italian province of Pola, but found the work tiresome, and often spoke to his students about the faults of Ireland and the joys of drinking, rather than verbs and vocabulary.
    • In the great Irish emigrant tradition, Joyce and Nora "brought over" three of Joyce’s siblings to Trieste. His favorite brother, Stannie, worked alongside Joyce in the Berlitz School.
  3. Apr 7, 2021 · The couple both confront health problems: Nora has a hysterectomy for uterine cancer, while Jim suffers from degenerating eyesight (now speculated to be the result of syphilis).

  4. Though the couple described themselves as husband and wife, in fact, they did not marry until 1931. Joyce used Nora's personality, indeed, and her background in the west of Ireland for the character of Greta Conroy in his story The Dead .

  5. Joyce, Nora (1884–1951) Wife of Irish novelist James Joyce and the inspiration for many of the female characters in his works. Name variations: Nora Joseph Barnacle; Norah Barnacle. Born on March 22 (or 23), 1884, in Galway, Ireland; died on April 10, 1951, in Zurich, Switzerland; daughter of Thomas Barnacle (a baker) and Honoraria "Annie ...

  6. In 1909, when James Joyce and his beloved Nora Barnacle were parted – he was in Dublin on business, she was back in their home in Trieste – Nora’s absence made Joyces heart shrivel.