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Bloomsday

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  • » Bloomsday
    the history of
    the festival.

    » Intermarriage
    a Jewish take.

    » Jesus
    was a Jew.

    » Read
    Ulysses right now--
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    Bloomsday

    On June 16th, literary geeks around the world (and on the Internet) will celebrate Bloomsday, a holiday named after Leopold Bloom, the protagonist of James Joyce's novel Ulysses.

    Ulysses
     is 783 pages, but it takes place entirely on one day--June 16. Its plot mirrors Homer's Odyssey, with Bloom standing in for Odysseus and his wife, Molly, as Penelope. There's even a Cyclops, an unnamed citizen who berates Bloom's Jewishness. Leo "defeats" him by remarking that the man's own savior, Jesus, was a Jew.

    In fact, Bloom does not consider himself Jewish--his father was Jewish; his mother Protestant; and Bloom converted to Catholicism in order to marry his wife. Still, he is frequently mistaken for a Jew. Additionally, his hat and coat and large nose (see Joyce's own sketch of Bloom, to the right) suggest a Jewish caricature. Joyce actually modeled Bloom after his close friend, the Jewish writer Aron Ettore Schmitz.

    In Philadelphia, the Rosenbach Museum, which houses the original manuscript of Ulysses, celebrates Bloomsday each year with a marathon reading of the book. This year, you can also follow the book on Twitter, where a writers' collective is preparing to creatively adapt the book in the original time sequence.

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