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  1. Jun 16, 2015 · June 16, 2015 7:00 AM EDT. T he day June 16, 1904, was a big one in the romantic life of Leopold Bloom, the protagonist of James Joyces’ Ulysses, at least inside his head. In celebration of that ...

  2. Bloom is a thirty-eight-year-old advertising canvasser. His father was a Hungarian Jew, and Joyce exploits the irony of this fact—that Dublin’s latter-day Odysseus is really a Jew with Hungarian origins—to such an extent that readers often forget Bloom’s Irish mother and multiple baptisms.

  3. Rudolph (Rudy) Bloom (b. 1893 – d. 1893) Religion. Catholicism. Nationality. Irish. Leopold Bloom is the fictional protagonist and hero of James Joyce 's 1922 novel Ulysses. His peregrinations and encounters in Dublin on 16 June 1904 mirror, on a more mundane and intimate scale, those of Ulysses/ Odysseus in Homer 's epic poem: The Odyssey .

  4. The nature of Bloom’s Judaism is not fully revealed in Ulysses—instead, Joyce shows that judgments about Bloom’s Judaism reveal more about the other characters than they reveal about Bloom himself. Bloom is also clearly aligned with Irish identity through various details in Episode Four, such as his Irish-language personal place name ...

  5. Jun 4, 2024 · Leopold Bloom, fictional character in James Joyce ’s novel Ulysses (1922). Bloom is the Odysseus figure (from Homer ’s Odyssey) whose wanderings through Dublin during one 24-hour period on June 16, 1904, form the central action of the novel. His name has lent itself to Bloomsday, an annual celebration of Ulysses that is held on June 16 in ...

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  6. www.cliffsnotes.com › literature › uChapter 18

    With all of Molly's untutored insights into the human condition, her full acceptance of the fun of life, one question remains for the reader of Ulysses: what is to be the future relationship between Molly and Bloom? Although the question is ultimately unanswerable (for anyone), Joyce does provide several clues or workpoints that argue to a ...

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  8. The Homeric design of his new novel encouraged him to create such a person, "manyminded," practical, tested by adversity. He found his Ulysses in the man he called "Mr Leopold Bloom." Bloom too is autobiographical in many ways, the self-expression of an older James Joyce. But in many other ways he represents a leap outside of the artist's ...

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