In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Valérie Bénéjam is Maître de Conférences in English Literature at the University of Nantes. She has written many articles about Joyce’s work, which have appeared in European Joyce Studies and French journals such as Etudes Britanniques Contemporaines and Tropisms or have been published online in Genetic Joyce Studies and Hypermedia Joyce Studies. She is currently writing a monograph about Ulysses entitled All About Molly, as well as co-editing, with John Bishop, a collection of articles, Making Space in the Works of James Joyce, on the issue of Joyce’s representations, across his work, of spatiality and space. Her current research also investigates the connections between Joyce and Gustave Flaubert, as well as the role of theater in Joyce’s fiction.

Erin Hollis is Assistant Professor of English at California State University, Fullerton. She is currently working on a project that examines footnotes in Norton Critical Editions of modernist texts, including James Joyce’s Dubliners and T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land. Her next project, “What the Thunderwords Said,” will investigate intersections of sound and interpretation in Finnegans Wake.

Hsin-Yu Hung is a D.Phil. student in English literature at St. Anne’s College, Oxford University. She is currently working on her doctoral thesis entitled “Styles and Genres in Ulysses.” She has been awarded the Zurich James Joyce Foundation Scholarship for 2009.

Eli Z. Lassman is an advertising copywriter at Google. He earned his D.Phil. degree from the University of Oxford, focusing on Joyce manuscript studies. He is an active member of the London Ulysses and Finnegans Wake reading groups and has published previously on Arthur Miller and on the Finnegans Wake notebooks in Genetic Joyce Studies.

Alberto Lázaro is Professor of English Literature at the University of Alcalá in Madrid, Spain, where he has taught twentieth-century English literature since 1987. He has done extensive research on contemporary British and Irish fiction, devoting particular attention to critical reception and censorship. He recently co-authored, with Antonio Raúl de Toro, James Joyce in Spain: A Critical Bibliography, 1972–2002 and has published H. G. Wells en España and El modernismo en la novela inglesa. He is also the author of essays on Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and H. G. Wells in three volumes of the “Reception of British Authors in Europe” series.

Geert Lernout teaches English and comparative literature at the University of Antwerp, where he is director of the James Joyce Center. He has published on Joyce, Friedrich Hölderlin, and the history of the book [End Page 395] in English and Dutch. With Vincent Deane and Daniel Ferrer, he is the editor of the “Finnegans Wake” Notebooks at Buffalo.

Maren Linett is Associate Professor at Purdue University and the author of Modernism, Feminism, and Jewishness. She has published articles on Virginia Woolf, Dorothy Richardson, and Jean Rhys and is currently editing two collections: The Cambridge Companion to Modernist Women Writers for the Cambridge University Press and Virginia Woolf: An MFS Reader for the Johns Hopkins University Press. In 2005, she guest-edited a special issue of Modern Fiction Studies entitled Modernism’s Jews/Jewish Modernisms.

Simon Loekle is a commentator of WBAI in New York City, where he frequently includes programs on Joyce studies in his broadcasts. His “dazibao” on matters Joycean have appeared in the newsletters of the James Joyce Society and are a regular feature of the JJQ.

Victor Luftig is Associate Professor, Director of the Center for the Liberal Arts, and Co-Director of the Lenore Annenberg Teaching Fellows Program at the University of Virginia. He teaches each summer at Middlebury College’s Bread Loaf School of English and is writing a book on the controversy over the English poet laureateship following the death of Alfred Tennyson.

Gregg Mayer is a lawyer and writer in Jackson, Mississippi. At the University of Mississippi School of Law, he served as editor-in-chief of the Mississippi Law Journal from 2005–2006. His work has appeared in Law & Literature and St. John’s Journal of Legal Commentary. He is a member of the National Book Critics Circle.

Murray McArthur is Associate Professor of Modern British...

pdf

Share