Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. John Stanislaus Joyce (December 17, 1884 – June 16, 1955) was an Irish teacher, scholar, diarist and writer who lived for many years in Trieste. He was the younger brother of James Joyce . He was generally known as Stanislaus Joyce to distinguish him from his father , who shared the same name.

  2. John Stanislaus Joyce. Grave of John Joyce and his wife Mary in Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin. The grave is within sight of the grave of Charles Stewart Parnell, John Joyce's hero. John Stanislaus Joyce (4 July 1849 – 29 December 1931) was the father of writer James Joyce, and a well known Dublin man about town.

  3. Stanislaus Joyce ( Dublín, 17 de diciembre de 1884 - Trieste, 16 de junio de 1955) fue un profesor, estudioso y escritor irlandés que vivió muchos años en Italia. Fue hermano menor del famoso novelista James Joyce. Éste lo llamaba "piedra de afilar" ("whetstone") y solía compartir sus ideas y proyectos literarios con él.

  4. Joyce, (John) Stanislaus (1884–1955), brother and supporter of James Joyce (qv), was born 17 December 1884 in Dublin, son of John Stanislaus Joyce (qv), civil servant, and his wife, May Murray. Throughout his adult life he called himself Stanislaus to distance himself from his father.

  5. We cannot overestimate the importance of James Joyce's father in the making of the novel Ulysses. Joyce wrote about him, “I got from him his portraits, a waistcoat, a good tenor voice, and an extravagant licentious disposition.” In the novel Ulysses, Simon Dedalus is a version of John Stanislaus Joyce, James Joyce's father.

  6. Joyce, John Stanislaus (1849–1931), businessman, civil servant, and father of James Joyce (qv), was born 4 July 1849 in Cork city, the only son of James Augustine Joyce, a minor corporation official, born in Fermoy, Co. Cork, and his wife Ellen (née O'Connell), a distant relation of Daniel O'Connell (qv), a connection of some importance both ...

  7. John Stanislaus Joyce was able to trace his family line back to his great-grandfather, a certain George Joyce, who flourished about the end of the eighteenth century. But as John Stanislaus was the only son of an only son of an only son, there seemed to be no immediate Joyce relatives by whom the family traditions in which he set such great store could be confirmed.