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  • Contributors

Valérie Bénéjam is Maître de Conférences in English Literature at the Université de Nantes. She has written many articles about Joyce and is currently working on a monograph about Ulysses entitled All About Molly and co-editing, with John Bishop, a collection of articles on the issue of space entitled Making Space in the Works of James Joyce, forthcoming from Routledge Publishers. Her current research also investigates the role of theater in Joyce's fiction.

Gregory Castle is Professor of British and Irish Literature at Arizona State University. He has published Modernism and the Celtic Revival, Reading the Modernist Bildungsroman, and The Blackwell Guide to Literary Theory. He has also edited Postcolonial Discourses: An Anthology and The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literary and Cultural Theory, Volume 1, 1900-1966. He has published numerous essays on James Joyce, W. B. Yeats, Oscar Wilde, and other Irish writers and is currently working on Inventing Souls: The Pedagogies of Irish Revivalism, a study of misrecognition and political education in Irish Revivalism.

Suzanne W. Churchill is Associate Professor of English at Davidson College, where she teaches courses in modern British, Irish, and American poetry, modernism in magazines, literature and the visual arts, and the humanities. She is the author of The Little Magazine "Others" and the Renovation of Modern American Poetry and co-editor, with Adam McKible, of Little Magazines & Modernism: New Approaches. She has published articles on modernist magazines, poetics, and pedagogy in various edited collections and in journals such as American Periodicals, Critical Inquiry, the Journal of Modern Literature, and Modernism/modernity.

John Xiros Cooper is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia. He has published five books and a number of articles and book chapters. His new book, Taming Modernism, will be published in 2011.

Kevin J. H. Dettmar is W. M. Keck Professor of English at Pomona College. He has published on Joyce and modernism, as well as on rock and roll, and is series co-editor, with Mark Wollaeger, of the Oxford University Press series "Modernist Literature & Culture." He blogs on contemporary culture at <http://fakechineserubberplant.com>.

Ariela Freedman is Associate Professor in the Liberal Arts College, Concordia University, Montreal. She recently spent a semester as a Visiting Professor and Halbert Fellow in the English Department of Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She is the author of Death, Men and Modernism and has published articles on modernism in Modernism/modernity, the Journal of Modern Literature, [End Page 629] Joyce Studies Annual, and other journals and edited collections. She has articles forthcoming in Partial Answers and Literature Compass, and she contributed the entry entitled "World War I in Fiction" to The Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Fiction.

John Gordon is Professor of English at Connecticut College. He is the author of James Joyce's Metamorphoses, "Finnegans Wake": A Plot Summary, Physiology and the Literary Imagination, Joyce and Reality: The Empire Strikes Back, and many articles on modern literature. His next book, Charles Dickens: Sensation and Sublimation, is forthcoming from Palgrave Macmillan.

Jason David Hall is Lecturer in English at the University of Exeter. He has published articles on nineteenth- and twentieth-century poetry and poetic form, and, with Ashby Bland Crowder, he is co-editor of Seamus Heaney: Poet, Critic, Translator. His first monograph, Seamus Heaney's Rhythmic Contract, appeared in 2009, and he is currently editing a collection of essays for the Ohio University Press entitled Meter Matters: Verse Cultures of the Long Nineteenth Century and working on a book-length cultural history of nineteenth-century prosody, Promiscuous Feet.

Louise Hornby is Assistant Professor of English and affiliated faculty in Film Studies at Tulane University. She is completing a book titled The Lens of Objectivity: Modernist Photography, Literature, and Film. Her recent work has appeared in ELN and the JJQ.

Lee A. Jacobus is Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Connecticut, where he taught Modern Irish Literature. He has recently published a novel, Crown Island, and a book of short stories, Volcanic Jesus: Hawaiian Tales.

Peter Kalliney teaches English at the University of Kentucky. He is the author of Cities of Affluence and Anger: A Literary Geography of Modern Englishness. He is...

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