A portrait of the artist as a young teacher: James Joyce's walking-talking classroom

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper traces a deep affinity between teaching and learning, talking and walking. This affinity runs as a red thread from the Greeks walking to Delphi; to Walter Benjamin’s (1992a) flâneur, the urban stroller in Paris and Berlin; to Jane Jacobs’ (1961) celebration of New York's ‘sidewalk ballet’; to Simmel’s (1971) discussion of the metropolis, mental life, and modernity's zeitgeist; to the Chicago and Birmingham schools’ ethnographies of street scenes and subcultures by Park and Burgess (1925) and Hebdige (1979); to Maggie O’Neill's (2018) O‘Neill and Roberts (2019) use of ‘walking methods’ as a way into the fragile, precarious, liminal worlds of migrants, refugees, and sex-workers. O’Neill's renaissance of a deep tradition of walking-talking sociological methods resonates very well also with James Joyce's artistic, moral, political, and pedagogical method, whereby the author and his protagonists, (who are mostly people who have been crushed down and pushed to the margins by overwhelming global historical forces) and his readers (a literate, middle-class, cosmopolitan, general public) participate in and co-create a transformative walking-talking classroom convened and conducted through city streets, as exemplified in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)142-160
Number of pages19
JournalIrish Journal of Sociology
Volume31
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2023

Keywords

  • classroom
  • James
  • Joyce
  • walking

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A portrait of the artist as a young teacher: James Joyce's walking-talking classroom'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this