Jump to content

Nora Barnacle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Norah Barnacle)

Nora Barnacle
Nora Barnacle Joyce, c. 1926 in this cropped photograph by Berenice Abbott
Born(1884-03-21)21 March 1884
Galway, Ireland
Died10 April 1951(1951-04-10) (aged 67)
Zurich, Switzerland
Spouse
(m. 1931; died 1941)
Children2, including Lucia Joyce

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. Barnacle did not, however, enjoy the novel. Their sexually explicit letters have aroused much curiosity, especially as Joyce normally disapproved of coarse language, and they fetch high prices at auction. In 2004, an erotic letter from Joyce to Barnacle sold at Sotheby's for £240,800.

Barnacle and Joyce's life together has been the subject of much popular interest. A 1980 play, Nora Barnacle by Maureen Charlton, was made about their relationship. Barnacle was the subject of a 1988 biography, Nora: A Biography of Nora Joyce, by Brenda Maddox, which was adapted into a 2000 Irish film, Nora, directed by Pat Murphy, and starring Susan Lynch and Ewan McGregor.

Early life

[edit]

Barnacle was born in a Galway workhouse on 21 March 1884.[1] Her entry in the birth register, which gives her first name as "Norah", is dated 22 March. Her father, Thomas Barnacle, a baker in Connemara, was an illiterate man who was 38 years old when she was born. Her mother, Annie Honoria Healy, was 28 and worked as a dressmaker. The unusual surname Barnacle is derived from the Irish Ó Cadhain, usually anglicised as Coyne, Kyne, or Cohen or Coen. But in Irish, cadhan means "wild goose", and some families made the translation to Barnacle, after the barnacle goose.[2]

From 1886 to 1889, Barnacle's parents sent her to live with her maternal grandmother Catherine Mortimer Healy. During these years, she began studies at a convent, eventually graduating from a national school in 1891. In 1896, 12-year-old Barnacle completed her schooling and began to work as a porteress and laundress. In the same year, her mother threw her father out for drinking and the couple separated. Barnacle went to live with her mother and her uncle, Tom Healy, at 4 Bowling Green, Galway. This house has since been converted into a small museum dedicated to Nora.

In 1896, at age 12, Barnacle fell in love with a teenager named Michael Feeney, who died soon after of typhoid and pneumonia. In a dramatic coincidence, another boy she loved, Michael Bodkin, died in 1900 – causing some of her friends to call her "man-killer".[3] Joyce later referenced these incidents in the final short story in Dubliners, "The Dead". It was rumoured that she sought comfort from her friend, budding English theatre starlet Laura London, who introduced her to a Protestant named Willie Mulvagh. In 1903, she left Galway after her uncle learned of the affair and friendship, and went to Dublin where she worked as a chambermaid at Finn's Hotel (later the name of the hotel was used as the title for a posthumously published collection of 10 short narrative pieces written by Joyce, Finn's Hotel, in 2013[4]).

Relationship with Joyce

[edit]
Paris 1924: Clockwise from top left – James Joyce, Giorgio Joyce, Nora Barnacle, Lucia Joyce

Barnacle met Joyce on 10 June 1904 while in Dublin and they had their first romantic liaison on 16 June. Joyce later chose 16 June 1904 as the date for the setting for his novel Ulysses and the date has come to be known and celebrated around the world as Bloomsday. The 1904 rendezvous began a long relationship that eventually led to marriage in 1931[5] and continued until Joyce's death.

Barnacle's and Joyce's relationship was complex. They had different personalities, tastes and cultural interests. Of their first meeting, she recalled: "I mistook him for a Swedish sailor – His electric blue eyes, yachting cap and plimsolls. But when he spoke, well then, I knew him at once for just another Dublin jackeen chatting up a country girl."[6] The numerous erotic letters they exchanged suggest they loved each other passionately.[7] These are also of interest because of Joyce's lifelong dislike of swearing and crude language.[8] Joyce seems to have admired and trusted her, and Barnacle clearly loved Joyce and trusted him enough to agree to leave Ireland with him for the Continent. In anticipation of the move to Paris, she began studying French.

In 1904, Barnacle and Joyce left Ireland for continental Europe and the following year set up house in Trieste (at that time in Austria-Hungary). On 27 June 1905, Nora Barnacle gave birth to a son, Giorgio and later to a daughter, Lucia, on 26 July 1907. A miscarriage in 1908 coincided with the beginning of a difficult time for both. Though she remained by his side, and the couple were legally married in London in 1931, she complained to her sister both about his personal qualities and his writings.

In these letters to her sister, she said he drank too much and wasted too much money. As for his literary activity, she lamented that his writings were obscure and lacking in sense. She was always fiercely proud of him, although she occasionally expressed impatience at his meetings with other artists and admitted she would have preferred him to have been a musician—in his youth, he was a talented singer—rather than a writer.

Lucia's mental illness, which became acute in the early 1930s, posed another challenge to the couple's relationship. Nora believed the condition required hospitalisation, which Joyce opposed. They brought in many specialists, and Lucia was for a time the patient of Carl Jung. She was diagnosed with schizophrenia and admitted to a clinic in 1936. Her father visited her there often, but not her mother. As Nora's biographer Brenda Maddox recorded, "Lucia was rarely out of Nora's mind. Because she had aroused Lucia's most florid schizophrenic reactions, Nora was not allowed to accompany Joyce on his ritual Sunday afternoon visits to Ivry. Not only did this exclude her from any contact with her daughter, it also required her to spend much of each week arranging for someone to accompany Joyce, who could not easily go alone ... Joyce liked to portray himself as safe from Lucia's violence as if he was the only other permitted inhabitant of her private world. Yet once when Giorgio went with his father, Lucia saw them and cried, 'Che bello! Che bello!' then lunged and tried to strangle them." As Maddox also noted, "There is no record that Nora ever saw her daughter again."[citation needed]

Later life and death

[edit]

After Joyce's death in Zurich in 1941, Nora decided to remain there for the rest of her days. She died in Zurich of acute kidney failure in 1951, at age 67. She was buried at Fluntern Cemetery, by her husband's side. Their son Giorgio was buried with them in 1976.[9]

Legacy

[edit]

In 1980, the play Nora Barnacle by Maureen Charlton, depicting the life of Barnacle and Joyce, debuted at the Dublin Theatre Festival. The Washington Post described the play as "the finest piece of theatre at this or at other theatre festival since The Cherry Orchard with Siobhán McKenna in 1968".[10]

In 1988, Nora Barnacle was the subject of a biography by Brenda Maddox, Nora: A Biography of Nora Joyce.[11] In 2000, this biography was adapted into a film directed by Pat Murphy, starring Susan Lynch and Ewan McGregor.[12]

In 2004, an erotic letter from Joyce to Barnacle sold at Sotheby's for £240,800, a record amount for a modern-day letter at auction.[8]

A novel, Nora, by Nuala O'Connor, was published in 2021.[13]

In 2023, Mary Morrissy published Penelope Unbound, a novel which imagined a different outcome to the life of Nora Barnacle and Joyce after they arrived in Trieste in 1904.[14]

Nora Barnacle House Museum: Nora's childhood home in Bowling Green, Galway has been converted into a small museum dedicated to her life.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "General Registrar's Office" (PDF). IrishGenealogy.ie. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Founding feathers – Frank McNally on the surname Barnacle and other Irish oddities". The Irish Times.
  3. ^ O'Brien, Edna (19 June 1988). "She Was the Other Ireland". The New York Times.
  4. ^ "James Joyce's 'last undiscovered' collection to be published". TheGuardian.com. 14 June 2013. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  5. ^ "James (Augustine Aloysius) Joyce Biography (1882–1941)". Archived from the original on 15 May 2017. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  6. ^ Norris, David; Flint, Carl (1994). Introducing Joyce: a graphic guide. London: Icon Books Ltd. p. 46. ISBN 978-184831-351-4.
  7. ^ Maddox, Brenda (8 July 2004). "Ah yes – but what ever happened to Nora's side of the correspondence?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 20 November 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  8. ^ a b "Joyce letter smashes sale record". BBC News. 8 July 2004. Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. 8 July 2004, bbc.co.uk, Accessed 16 June 2019
  9. ^ Jordan, Anthony (13 January 2018). "Remembering James Joyce, 77 years to the day after his death". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 3 March 2020.
  10. ^ "Maureen Charlton". Irish Independent. Dublin. 19 August 2007. ISSN 0021-1222. Archived from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  11. ^ Maddox, Brenda (1988). Nora: Biography of Nora Joyce. Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 9780241123850. Archived from the original on 20 May 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  12. ^ "Nora (2000)". imdb.com. Archived from the original on 29 April 2019. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  13. ^ "Nora: Nuala O'Connor brings Joyce's wife lustily to life". www.independent.ie. 15 May 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  14. ^ John Banville (3 October 2023). "Penelope Unbound by Mary Morrissy review – masterly alternative life of Nora Barnacle". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
[edit]