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  • Contributors

Ann Ardis is Associate Dean of Arts and Humanities and Professor of English at the University of Delaware. She is the author of Modernism and Cultural Conflict, 1880-1922 and New Women, New Novels: Feminism and Early Modernism. With Leslie Lewis, she edited Women’s Experience of Modernity, 1875-1945. With Bonnie Kime Scott, she edited Virginia Woolf: Turning the Centuries. Currently, she is developing, with Pat Collier, a collection of essays on transatlantic print culture, 1880-1940, for Palgrave Macmillan. An outtake of her current book-length project appears in the Fall 2007 issue of Modernism/modernity. Anne L. Cavender is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Redlands. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Washington as a student of Hazard Adams and Ching-hsien Wang, and she works on the relationship between theories of reading and ethics in the Chinese and western literary traditions. Tim Conley is Assistant Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at Brock University, where he also teaches in the graduate program in Comparative Literature and Arts. He is the author of Joyces Mistakes: Problems of Intention, Irony, and Interpretation and a collection of short fiction, Whatever Happens, and is co-author (with Stephen Cain) of The Encyclopedia of Fictional and Fantastic Languages. Jay Dickson is Associate Professor of English and the Humanities at Reed College. His essay “Defining the Sentimentalist in Ulysses” appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of the JJQ. Sidney Feshbach is retired from teaching at City College, City University of New York, and is an adjunct research professor at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. He writes about James Joyce, Wallace Stevens, John Berger, and Noam Chomsky. Ruth Frehner is a part-time curator at the Zurich James Joyce Foundation and teaches at the St. Gallen College for Teacher Education. Among her publications is the exhibition catalog James Joyce: “Gedacht durch meine Augen” (James Joyce: “Thought Through my Eyes”), which she co-authored with Ursula Zeller. John Gordon received his B.A. degree from Hamilton College and his Ph.D. from Harvard University. He is the author of many essays, notes, and reviews about Joyce, including two monographs and three books, the most recent being Joyce and Reality: The Empirical Strikes Back. In his Physiology and the Literary Imagination, which he wishes he had entitled Writers Playing Doctor, he analyzes an array of nineteenth- and twentieth-century authors, Joyce included, according to their documented ideas about medicine. He is currently writing a book about Charles Dickens and [End Page 627] his conception of the unconscious. Peter Hayes is an Australian lawyer living in Melbourne. He has degrees in science, arts, and law from the University of Melbourne and is an occasional freelance writer on Australian literature, annotator of twentieth-century authors, and student of the Wake. Lee Jacobus is Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Connecticut. In retirement, he conducts a Classics Reading Group in Madison, Connecticut, and has been writing fiction. His book entitled The Humanities Through the Arts has just been translated into Chinese. He thinks that is a good sign. He is currently working on a new edition of his Bedford Introduction to Drama. Scott W. Klein is Associate Professor of English at Wake Forest University. He is the author of The Fictions of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis: Monsters of Nature and Design and has published articles and reviews in ELH, Twentieth Century Literature, Modernism/modernity, Modern Fiction Studies, and other journals. William Kupinse is Associate Professor of English at the University of Puget Sound. His publications include an article on Indian fiction in the collection Filth and essays on H. G. Wells in Novel and on Joyce in the South Carolina Review. He is currently at work on a book entitled The Remains of Empire: Waste, Nation, and Modernism. Corinna Del Greco Lobner is the author of James Joyce’s Italian Connection and an advisory editor for the JJQ. She has published several articles and book reviews with work appearing in the Irish University Review and Italica. Her book The Mafia in Sicilian Literature is forthcoming from the New Academia Publishers. Work in progress includes Gabriele...

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