Leopold Bloom, fictional character in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses (1922). Bloom is the Odysseus figure (from Homer’s Odyssey) whose wanderings through Dublin during one 24-hour period on June 16, 1904, form the central action of the novel. His name has lent itself to Bloomsday, an annual celebration of Ulysses that is held on June 16 in many cities throughout the world, most famously in Dublin.
Bloomsday map of Dublin featuring sites from James Joyce’s UlyssesBloom is curious, decent, pacific, and somewhat timid. As a Jew, he is regarded by some as an outsider in Christian Ireland. In the book’s “Cyclops” chapter, Bloom enters Barney Kiernan’s pub and suffers the verbal assaults of an anti-Semitic Irish nationalist patron referred to as “the citizen.” Yet Bloom also represents an everyman. Though he never ventures beyond Dublin, Bloom is a wanderer like the Greek mythological hero Ulysses (Odysseus), to whom he is compared throughout the book. In Stephen Dedalus, who represents both Telemachus and Joyce himself, Bloom finds a surrogate son.
Through Joyce’s use of stream of consciousness, the reader knows Bloom’s thoughts as they occur, rather than being filtered by a narrator. After Bloom’s psychological and literary wanderings, he returns home to his unfaithful wife, Molly (a parody of Penelope), who has spent part of the day in bed with her lover, Blazes Boylan.
Because many of the novel’s characters are modeled on Joyce’s various friends and family members, Joycean scholars have attempted to identify Bloom’s real-life counterpart. Although several individuals have been proposed, there is little certainty as to who really inspired Leopold Bloom, and he may in fact be a composite of multiple people with whom Joyce was acquainted.