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221 Contributors A BBY BE N DE R teaches literature at New York University in the Irish Studies program; she received her PhD in English from Princeton University. She is the author of Israelites in Erin: Exodus, Typology, and the Irish Revival (Syracuse Univ. Press, forthcoming), as well as essays on the symbols of IrishMexican solidarity during the Mexican-American War (in Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture), Roger Casement’s influence on James Joyce (in the James Joyce Quarterly), the politics of Lady Gregory’s biblical allusions (in the Princeton Library Chronicle), and the pedagogy of teaching Ulysses through attention to one of its smallest circulating objects: the crumb. Her new work examines the figure of the nursing mother in Irish literature and culture. J US T I N BE PL AT E teaches at the Université Panthéon-Assas (Paris II). He has published articles on James Joyce and Samuel Beckett in various journals, including the Modern Language Review, Journal of Beckett Studies, and Journal of Modern Literature, and is a regular contributor to the Times Literary Supplement. V I NC E N T J. C H E NG is the Shirley Sutton Thomas Professor of English at the University of Utah. He is the author of several books: Inauthentic: The Anxiety over Culture and Identity (2004), Joyce, Race, and Empire (1995), Shakespeare and Joyce: A Study of “Finnegans Wake” (1984), “Le Cid”: A Translation in Rhymed Couplets (1987), and (as co-editor) Joyce in Context (1992) and Joycean Cultures (1999)—as well as of many essays and chapters on modern literature and culture. He has also been the recipient of numerous scholarly awards and fellowships. Currently he is working on a study of “Amnesia and Forgetting” in modern literature. 222 Contributors A N N E FO G A R T Y is a professor of James Joyce studies at University College Dublin and head of the UCD School of English, Drama and Film. She was editor of the Irish University Review (2002–9) and is co-editor with Luca Crispi of the Dublin James Joyce Journal. She is co-editor with Timothy Martin of Joyce on the Threshold (2005), with Morris Beja of Bloomsday 100: Essays on Ulysses (2009), and with Fran O’Rourke, James Joyce: Multidisciplinary Perspectives (2014). She has edited special issues of the Irish University Review on Spenser and Ireland, Lady Gregory, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, and Benedict Kiely and has published widely on aspects of contemporary Irish fiction and poetry. She is currently completing a study of the historical and political dimensions of Ulysses, entitled James Joyce and Cultural Memory: Reading History in Ulysses. O ON A F R AW L E Y is a lecturer in Irish and world literature at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth. Prior to joining the School of English in 2008, she held postdoctoral research fellowships at Trinity College Dublin and Queen’s University, Belfast. The author of Irish Pastoral: Nature and Nostalgia in Twentieth-Century Irish Literature (2005), Oona is the editor of A New and Complex Sensation: Essays on Joyce’s Dubliners (2004), Selected Essays of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill (2005), and New Dubliners (2005). She is the editor of Memory Ireland Volume 1: History and Modernity (2010), Memory Ireland Volume 2: Diaspora and Memory Practices (2012), and Memory Ireland Volume 3: The Famine and the Troubles (2014). Oona is completing a monograph on Spenser in Irish cultural memory, Spenser’s Trace, and has begun work on a new book on the global Irish novel. Her own first novel, Flight, is published in 2014. ROBE R T G A R R AT T is Emeritus Professor of English and Humanities at the University of Puget Sound, Washington State. His publications include Modern Irish Poetry: Tradition and Continuity from Yeats to Heaney, The Uses of the Past: Essays on Irish Culture and Society, Critical Essays on Seamus Heaney, and Trauma and History in the Irish Novel (2010). LU K E G I BBON S is a professor of Irish literary and cultural studies in the Department of English at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, [13.58.216.18] Project MUSE (2024-04-26 11:52 GMT) Contributors 223 and formerly taught at the University of Notre Dame and Dublin City University . He has published widely on Irish culture, film, literature, and the visual arts, as well as on aesthetics and politics. His publications include Gaelic Gothic: Race, Colonialism and Irish Culture (2004), Edmund Burke and...

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