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  • Contributors

Snowdon Barnett has published ten volumes of poetry, the last two of which were Nocturne and Feasts of Devotion. His work can be obtained through <jsb@snowdonbarnett.com>.

Valérie Bénéjam is Maître de Conférences in English Literature at the University of Nantes. She is a regular participant at James Joyce International Symposia and a trustee of the International James Joyce Foundation. She has written many articles about Joyce and recently co-edited, with John Bishop, a collection of essays, Making Space in the Works of James Joyce, on the issue of Joyce’s representations, across his work, of spatiality and space. She is currently working on a monograph about Joyce’s fiction and theatricality entitled Joyce’s Novel Theatre.

Gordon Bowker taught at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He has edited two books and written biographies of Malcolm Lowry, Lawrence Durrell, George Orwell, and James Joyce.

Austin Briggs retired as Tompkins Professor of English from Hamilton College, New York, where he taught for fifty years. The author of The Novels of Harold Frederic, he has published many essays on Joyce in a variety of venues. His current projects focus on Ezra Pound’s anti-Semitism and on the changing attitude toward alcohol reflected in Joyce’s fiction.

M. Teresa Caneda Cabrera is Senior Lecturer at the University of Vigo in Galicia, Spain, where she teaches in the Departments of English and Translation Studies. She has published extensively on Joyce, modernism, and translation. She is the author of La estética modernista como práctica de resistencia en “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man” and the editor of Vigorous Joyce: Atlantic Readings of James Joyce. In 2008, she was responsible for the organization of the 19th Conference of the Spanish James Joyce Society. She currently sits on the editorial board of European Joyce Studies.

Richard J. Gerber and his wife Margy run R & M Gerber Books (<rmgerberbooks.com>), a site specializing in buying and selling modern first editions, with an emphasis on James Joyce.

Catherine Gubernatis Dannen is Assistant Professor of English at Alabama State University. She received her Ph.D. in English from Ohio State University in 2007 and specializes in twentieth-century British and Irish literature, nineteenth-century British literature, cultural studies, and scholarship on writing instruction. She has taught courses in twentieth-century British literature, the history of the novel, political literature, detective fiction, and sports media in American culture. Her book project, “Wine of the Country”: Joyce, Guinness, and Postcolonial Ireland, argues that the [End Page 797] discourse surrounding Guinness stout and other alcoholic beverages in the works of Joyce is actually a commentary on class, colonial, and cultural tensions in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Ireland.

Joseph Kelly is Professor of English at the College of Charleston. Most of his work on James Joyce has concerned biographical issues, including his Our Joyce: From Outcast to Icon. His study of antebellum slave ideology and dissent in the South, America’s Longest Siege, will be published in the summer of 2013 by the Overlook Press. He is at work on the third edition of his Seagull Reader series of introductions to literature published by W. W. Norton.

Simon Loekle lives in New York City, where he is known for his presentations on Joyce and other authors. His “dazibao” on matters Joycean have appeared in the newsletters of the James Joyce Society and are a regular feature of the James Joyce Quarterly.

Eleni Loukopoulou completed her doctorate at the University of Kent, Canterbury, on the topic of James Joyce and London. Her essay, “Joyce Exhibits at Cambridge’s Literary Laboratories,” on the publication background of an extract of Joyce’s work in the magazine Experiment (1931) appeared in the Journal of Modern Periodical Studies. Further work drawing on her Ph.D. research will appear in the forthcoming edited collection Irish Writing London.

Adam Piette is Professor of Modern Literature at the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom and the author of Remembering and the Sound of Words: Mallarmé, Proust, Joyce, Beckett, Imagination at War, and The Literary Cold War, 1939 to Vietnam.

John Paul Riquelme, Professor of English at Boston...

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