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  • Contributors

Roy Benjamin teaches English at Borough of Manhattan Community College. He has published articles on Finnegans Wake and a variety of other subjects in Journal of Modern Literature, Irish Studies Review, James Joyce Quarterly, and Joyce Studies Annual. He is currently working on a series of articles on the relation of the Wake to such subjects as noise, Kierkegaard, ocularcentrism, and self-organization.

Martha C. Carpentier is Professor of English at Seton Hall University, where she teaches courses in British, Irish, and American modernism. She is the author of Ritual, Myth, and the Modernist Text: The Influence of Jane Ellen Harrison on Joyce, Eliot, and Woolf (1998) and The Major Novels of Susan Glaspell (2001). She has co-edited Disclosing Intertextualities: The Stories and Plays of Susan Glaspell (2006) and, most recently, Her America: “A Jury of Her Peers” and Other Stories by Susan Glaspell (2010). Her articles have appeared in Genre, Studies in American Fiction, Yeats-Eliot Review, and James Joyce Quarterly. She is currently editing an anthology of essays entitled Joycean Legacies, which will examine Joyce’s influence on a range of contemporary British, Irish, American, and postcolonial writers.

Luca Crispi is Lecturer in the School of English, Drama, and Film at University College Dublin, Ireland. With Anne Fogarty, he is co-founder of the UCD James Joyce Research Center and co-editor of the Dublin James Joyce Journal. Formerly, he was the Joyce and W. B. Yeats Research Fellow at the National Library of Ireland, and Joyce Scholar in Residence at the University of Buffalo. He is currently completing a monograph entitled Becoming the Blooms: Creativity and the Construction of Character inUlysses.” The essay in this volume is part of his ongoing research for [End Page 287] a larger project, Ulysses in the Marketplace: The Production and Consumption of a Work of Art.

James Fairhall is the author of James Joyce and the Question of History. He teaches modern literature and environmental studies at DePaul University.

Richard J. Gerber, a dealer of rare and collectible books who specializes in Joyce and modern literature, is an independent researcher. His work has appeared in James Joyce Quarterly, James Joyce Literary Supplement, and elsewhere.

Arleen Ionescu is Reader in English Literature and Critical Theory at UPG Ploieşti in Romania. Her major research and teaching interests are in the fields of modernist prose and critical theory, particularly deconstruction and translation studies. She has published mainly on Joyce, Woolf, Beckett, and Blanchot, often from a comparative perspective.

Paul Jones was recently awarded a doctorate from the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York for a thesis on style and politics in Joyce, which he is revising for publication. He is also working on a project about aesthetic and philosophical practices of urban wandering from modernism to the present day, focusing on Joyce, Benjamin, the Situationists, and contemporary British psychogeography.

Erika Mihálycsa obtained her Ph.D. from Babeş-Bolyai University in Cluj, Romania, where she currently teaches twentieth-century British fiction and drama. Her thesis explores linguistic poetics in the fiction of Joyce, Flann O’Brien, and Beckett. Her studies of these writers have appeared in various volumes and periodicals, including Joyce Studies Annual. In 2010, with Fritz Senn, she co-organized a workshop on specific translation problems in Ulysses at the Zurich James Joyce Foundation, the materials of which are forthcoming in the e-journal Scientia Traductions. She is a translator of modern and contemporary Irish and British prose and poetry into Hungarian, including O'Brien's novel At Swim-Two-Birds.

James Robinson has written a number of articles on Joyce and Dante and is working on a monograph, Joyce’s Dante: Exile, Memory, and Community. He is currently Postdoctoral Lecturing Fellow in the School of Literature, Drama and Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. [End Page 288]

Bonnie Roos is Associate Professor of English at West Texas A&M University. Her research interests range from modernism to postcolonialism to world literatures. In addition to articles on other topics, she has published essays on Joyce in Comparative Literature Studies, the Yale Journal of Criticism, and Hungry Words: Images of Famine in...

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