A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: A Classic Modernist Novel of Youth, Art, and Awakening - Paperback
by Joyce James (Author)
James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is one of the defining modernist novels of the twentieth century, tracing the intellectual, religious, and artistic awakening of Stephen Dedalus in late nineteenth-century Ireland. First serialised in The Egoist from 1914 to 1915 and published in book form in 1916, the novel follows Stephen from childhood through school, family decline, religious crisis, sexual guilt, university life, and his final determination to leave Ireland in pursuit of art. The Zürich James Joyce Foundation identifies the novel as first serialised from February 1914 to September 1915 and published in book form by B. W. Huebsch in New York in 1916.
Unlike a conventional coming-of-age novel, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man changes its language as Stephen matures. The early pages move through the sensations and broken perceptions of childhood, while the later chapters become denser, more self-conscious, and increasingly shaped by Stephen's developing aesthetic philosophy. Britannica describes the novel as autobiographical, a major bildungsroman, and a work whose style reflects the emotional and intellectual age of its protagonist.
For readers of Irish literature, modernist fiction, coming-of-age novels, literary classics, and philosophical fiction, Joyce's first novel remains essential. It introduces Stephen Dedalus before his later appearance in Ulysses, but stands fully on its own as a study of youth, rebellion, conscience, Catholic formation, artistic ambition, and the making of a writer.