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  • Contributors

Eric Bulson is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. He has published articles about Joyce-related subjects in the Joyce Studies Annual, the James Joyce Quarterly, the Journal of Modern Literature, the Times Literary Supplement, and various edited collections. He is the author of The Cambridge Introduction to James Joyce and Novels, Maps, Modernity: The Spatial Imagination, 1850-2000.

Tim Conley is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Brock University. He is the editor of Joyce's Disciples Disciplined and co-editor of the forthcoming anthology from Action Books entitled Burning City: Poems of Metropolitan Modernity.

Ronan Crowley is a Ph.D. candidate at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. He is currently working on a dissertation entitled "Gifts of the Gab: Quotation, Copyright, and Irish Writing in the Twentieth Century," which uses Irish copyright law to explore citational practices in the work of Joyce, Denis Johnston, and John Montague. In 2010, he was awarded the Fritz Senn Scholarship by the International James Joyce Foundation.

Ariela Freedman is Associate Professor in the Liberal Arts College of Concordia University in Montreal. She spent a semester as a Visiting Professor and Halbert Fellow in the Department of English at 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, Joyce Studies Annual, the James Joyce Quarterly, and other journals and edited collections. Most recently, she has published in Partial Answers and the Literature Compass, and she contributed the entry on "World War I in Fiction" to The Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Fiction. Her research interests include James Joyce, global modernism, World War I fiction, and the graphic memoir and novel.

Alan Warren Friedman has authored five books, including Fictional Death and the Modernist Enterprise and Oral Storytelling and Social Performance in Joyce and Beckett, as well as monographs on Lawrence Durrell and William Faulkner and a study of form and mortality in modern novels. His ten edited books and journals include compilations on Durrell, Joyce, Samuel Beckett, and Mario Vargas Llosa. He is Thaman Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Texas at Austin and has also taught at universities in England, France, and Ireland.

Richard J. Gerber and his wife Margy run R & M [End Page 487] Gerber Books (<rmgerberbooks.com>), a site specializing in buying and selling modern first editions, with an emphasis on James Joyce.

Irina Rasmussen Goloubeva has a Ph.D. degree from Uppsala University and is a Research Fellow in the Department of English at Stockholm University. As a modernist specializing in aesthetics, dialectical materialism, and sociopolitical criticism, her research interests include not only English-language literature but also modern-world literatures from the late-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries and particularly Russian modernism. Her manuscript, "Politics of Willing: Art and Political Imagination in James Joyce's Ulysses," unpacks the sociopolitical contradictions that sustain Joyce's modernist aesthetic. Her current project, "Modern Literary Economies Between the World Wars," studies figurations of labor and market relationships in Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Ernest Hemingway.

Hye Ryoung Kil has an M.A. degree in history from the University of Alabama and a Ph.D. in English literature from Yeungnam University, South Korea, where she is currently an Assistant Professor of English. She also serves on the editorial board of the James Joyce Society of Korea. She has published articles on postcolonial literature, particularly on Joseph Conrad and James Joyce, in journals such as the Journal of English Language and Literature, Studies in Modern Fiction, the James Joyce Journal, and Mosaic.

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.

Paul O Mahoney completed a Ph.D. in Philosophy at University College Dublin in 2006. His most recent publications include articles on Jean Baudrillard, the Menexenus and Symposium of Plato, and the political philosophy of Leo Strauss.

Fritz Senn has been with...

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