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

  • Notes on Contributors

G. W. Stephen Brodsky was a Special Lecturer (now retired) at Royal Roads Military College. He specializes in elements of Conrad’s szlachta tradition encoded in his oeuvre. He is author of Gentlemen of the Blade: A Social and Literary History of the British Army (1989) and other works relating to military culture. His articles and reviews on Conrad have appeared in Conradiana; The Conradian; Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives; Zwischen Ost und West: Joseph Conrad im europäischen Gespräch; Yearbook of Conrad Studies (Poland); and Modern Fiction Studies. His book Conrad’s Polish Soul: Realms of Memory and Self is forthcoming from Maria Curie Skłodowska University Press.

Riccardo Capoferro teaches English at Sapienza University of Rome. He has published on various aspects of eighteenth-century literature and culture, in particular on the origins of the fantastic. He has also published on Conrad, Kipling, and their reception in Italian culture.

Melissa Free is an Assistant Professor of English at Arizona State University. Her most recent work appears in Victorian Studies and The Oxford Handbook of Victorian Literary Culture. She is completing a manuscript on gender, race, and genre in British South African literature from the First Boer War through the First World War.

Mary Ann Melfi is Senior Lecturer at the College of William and Mary. She has published several articles on Victorian and modern novelists in such journals as Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature; The Journal of English and Germanic Philology; South Atlantic Review; The Victorian Newsletter; Dickens Studies Newsletter; and Colby Library Quarterly.

David Mulry is Professor of English and Chair of Arts and Humanities at the College of Coastal Georgia and webmaster for the Joseph Conrad Society of America website. He has published on political fiction, gender and colonialism, and manuscript revision in Conrad. His book, Conrad among the Anarchists: Nineteenth Century Terrorism and The Secret Agent, is under contract with Pal-grave Macmillan. [End Page 77]

...

pdf

Share