100th anniversary celebration of 'Dubliners'





To Participate: Bring a copy of the book. This can be downloaded free on the internet.

The gathering on October 25th will be at the Andalusian Center for Literature in Malaga at 10:30 am.

The venue for the November 15th gathering will also be the Andalusian Center for Literature in Malaga at 10:30 am.

A “Dubliner” book discussion takes place on Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Oct. 25 and features the first 14 short stories and another discussion is planned for Saturday, 10:30 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Nov. 15 and features both “The Dead,” the last short story in the book, and the film “The Dead,” directed by John Huston and starring his daughter, Angelica Huston.

Book lovers and Joyceans have the rare opportunity to delve into the “Dubliners” as part of a worldwide celebration of the 100-year anniversary of the publishing of the groundbreaking James Joyce book.

A crowd of Irish and non-Irish are invited to participate. Two “Dubliners” book discussions will take place Oct. 25 and Nov. 15.


“Dubliners” is considered one of the finest collections of short stories every published but shocked the literary world at the time it came out because of its sexual situations, language and critique of real situations and real people, many of whom were recognizable to Joyce’s Irish peers.

“It is the gold standard against which many writers compare their work,” said Adrienne Leavy, who led the discussion titled “James Joyce’s Dubliners: Still Engaging Readers & Writers 100 Years after Publication.”


Joyce’s window into the world of people in the town of Dublin, was a look at the life of every man.

“In the particular, is the universal,” Joyce would often say. “In the life of any man is the life of every man.”

“People were interested in his sense of realism. Joyce was very human. He wrote about and understood people’s weaknesses and foibles and did not judge them.”



James Joyce book inspires lectures, movies, and more.


The famous book was written by Irish novelist and poet James Joyce and came out in print in February 1914.

“Dubliners” is a collection of 15 short stories that was groundbreaking because it expanded the short story genre while featuring real people and real situations and racy language and sex scenes.

A “Dubliner” book discussion takes place 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Oct. 25 and features the first 14 stories and another discussion is planned for 10:30 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Nov. 15 and features both “The Dead,” the last short story in the book, and the film “The Dead,” directed by John Huston and starring his daughter, Angelica Huston.

For more information contact Roger Cummiskey at 666 78 26 42 or artroger@gmail.com

James Joyce Centre Dublin. Reading "The Dead".
"Dubliners" lecture series.

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