James Joyce included imagery of the Antipodes in Finnegans Wake to contribute to the book’s contrary themes and innovative depictions of space and place. Through close readings of the book’s references to the region known historically as the Antipodes (including but not limited to Australia and New Zealand), Joyce’s technique of doubling Ireland with other places as part of the book’s style shows his universal idea of the desirable yet complex merging of opposites. The trope of the Antipodes is of great value in studying the figuration of place and space in Finnegans Wake, as the region was considered to be opposed to Europe in more than geographical terms. The Antipodes are merged with Ireland in Finnegans Wake by collapsing distance throu...