EPISODE · Jun 15, 2026 · 1H 19M
2.40 analysing Cyclops 3
from North London Ulysses · host Russell Raphael
Here Russell analyses the final and explosive third of the Cyclops episode. Racism, nationalism, fiery chariots and flying biscuit tins. It's all here and washed down with lashings of Guinness's porter. And through the madness, Bloom tries to make a case for love, which the citizen takes as symptomatic that the likes of Bloom, who has temporarily left the scene, whom have been allowed into the country, are not proper men, let alone proper Irishmen. We sense the dark shadow of suggestion that certain races are stronger, more manly and superior to others. Penguin Classic: 426Gabler: 269Project Guttenberg: Hanging over the bloody paper This podcast forms part of an educational reading group and is intended for criticism, discussion, and study. James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922) is in the public domain in the UK. This recording includes commentary, interpretation, and contextual explanation, and is not presented as a standalone audiobook. The readings in this podcast are provided for educational and discussion purposes. They are interwoven with commentary and analysis videos and are not intended to reproduce any specific commercial edition. The underlying text of Ulysses is in the public domain in the UK, and the reading here is part of a broader interpretive session. During sessions I refer to several editions of Ulysses for ease of navigation, including the Penguin Modern Classics edition or the Bodley Head 1993 'Gabler' edition or the Project Gutenberg e-book based on pre-1923 print editions. And may read from each and other editions. Page references are provided to help readers follow along in whichever edition they own. The reading itself is embedded within the broader commentary and discussion of the analysis podcasts and is not intended as a verbatim reproduction of any particular edition. This podcast contains or refers to commentary, analysis, and original discussion.© 2026 North London Ulysses and Russell Raphael. All rights reserved.
What this episode covers
Here Russell analyses the final and explosive third of the Cyclops episode. Racism, nationalism, fiery chariots and flying biscuit tins. It's all here and washed down with lashings of Guinness's porter. And through the madness, Bloom tries to make a case for love, which the citizen takes as symptomatic that the likes of Bloom, who has temporarily left the scene, whom have been allowed into the country, are not proper men, let alone proper Irishmen. We sense the dark shadow of suggestion that certain races are stronger, more manly and superior to others. Penguin Classic: 426Gabler: 269Project Guttenberg: Hanging over the bloody paper This podcast forms part of an educational reading group and is intended for criticism, discussion, and study. James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922) is in the public domain in the UK. This recording includes commentary, interpretation, and contextual explanation, and is not presented as a standalone audiobook. The readings in this podcast are provided for educational and discussion purposes. They are interwoven with commentary and analysis videos and are not intended to reproduce any specific commercial edition. The underlying text of Ulysses is in the public domain in the UK, and the reading here is part of a broader interpretive session. During sessions I refer to several editions of Ulysses for ease of navigation, including the Penguin Modern Classics edition or the Bodley Head 1993 'Gabler' edition or the Project Gutenberg e-book based on pre-1923 print editions. And may read from each and other editions. Page references are provided to help readers follow along in whichever edition they own. The reading itself is embedded within the broader commentary and discussion of the analysis podcasts and is not intended as a verbatim reproduction of any particular edition. This podcast contains or refers to commentary, analysis, and original discussion.© 2026 North London Ulysses and Russell Raphael. All rights reserved.
NOW PLAYING
2.40 analysing Cyclops 3
No transcript for this episode yet