Home is a focal point around which mental and material activities such as belonging, memory, migration, emplacement and displacement, revolve. As a concept, experience, emotion, and a historically contingent discourse, home shapes who we are as individuals and collectives. At once material and produced through the acts of imagination, home, just like the associated condition of community, is haunted by the paradox of boundaries—that is, the propensity to simultaneously assert and relinquish sovereignty. This ambivalence at the heart of home and community creates a space for the writer’s reflection and action, that is, for not only sanctioning but also questioning the accepted visions of home/ homeland in text. Joyce, I propose in this lecture, rewrote the classical text of home-seraching and homecoming to battle the historical upsurge of the static territorial discourse of home in the early twentieth century. This recourse to the assumedly non-territorial, non-boundary principles of mythic/ primordial home and the narratives of patri-and matrilineage is paired with the dynamic representation of material home itself across varied scales and chronotopic sites of Ulysses. Thus Joyce’s redeployment of the mythic home—just like Georg Lukács’s, Sigmund Freud’s and Franz Kafka’s—emphatically denies us the possibility of ever returning to that primary site, yet, similarly to Constantine Cavafy’s, it does not collapse into the mourning of lost home. What is the relationship between this careful balancing of affects, Joyce’s controversial appropriation of female voice in “Penelope,” and the new epistemology of home that emerges as one approaches the closure of the text? Prompted by the desire to read anew the performance of alternative gender affiliation in the concluding episode of Joyce’s Ulysses and to connect the preceding scholarly accounts of Joyce, cosmopolitanism, and gender with contemporary insights about differential home-communities, this lecture strives to answer these questions about Joyce’s vision of home.