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  • Contributors

Martin Brick is Assistant Professor of English at Ohio Dominican University. In addition to articles published on James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, he has published or presented on contemporary American authors including Don DeLillo, David Foster Wallace, and Mark Z. Danielewski.

Thomas Dilworth is a University (Distinguished) Professor at the University of Windsor, Ontario; a Killam Fellow; and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. He has published widely on modern literature and Romantic poetry and is the co-editor of The Letters of Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson and the author of Reading David Jones and David Jones in the Great War. He is writing a biography of David Jones.

Rachel Farebrother is a Lecturer in American Studies at Swansea University. She is the author of The Collage Aesthetic in the Harlem Renaissance.

Chris Forster is Assistant Professor of English at Syracuse University where he specializes in modernism and twentieth-century British literature. His research interests extend into book and media history and digital humanities. He is currently working on a book manuscript that examines modernist obscenity in the context of shifts in early-twentieth-century media.

Abigail Heiniger is at work on a book project entitled The Heroic Female Bildungsroman and Constructions of National Identity: Jane Eyre and Her Transatlantic Literary Descendants, which explores the literary genre that arose from Charlotte Brontë’s debut novel, Jane Eyre. It particularly examines the nationalistic stakes of the mythic and fairy-tale paradigms that were incorporated into the heroic female bildungsroman tradition. She received her Ph.D. in English Literature from Wayne State University in 2013 and currently works as a lecturer in the Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Department there.

Erin Hollis is Associate Professor in the Department of English, Comparative Literature, and Linguistics at California State University, Fullerton. She has published on James Joyce and popular culture and is currently working on a book about Joyce and love. Another current project is a book on teaching modernism, exploring how the difficulties of modernism offer opportunities for increased student engagement.

Grant Matthew Jenkins is Associate Professor of English at the University of Tulsa where he teaches twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature, experimental poetry and poetics, ethnic American literatures, creative writing (poetry), ethical and critical theory, and composition and rhetorical studies. He is the author of Poetic Obligation: Ethics in [End Page 403] Experimental American Poetry after 1945 and has published essays in Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature, Journal of American Studies, Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature, Sagetrieb: Journal of the Objectivist Tradition, and Poetry and Pedagogy: The Challenge of the Contemporary. His current book project examines the ethics of experimental African-American poetry after 1980.

Terence Killeen is Research Scholar at the James Joyce Centre, Dublin. He is the author of “Ulysses” Unbound: A Reader’s Companion to “Ulysses.” His most recent publication is “Tackling the Errears and Erroriboose: Another Look at the Rose/O’Hanlon Finnegans Wake,” in Genetic Joyce Studies, 13 (Spring 2013), <www.geneticjoycestudies.org>.

Onno Kosters is Assistant Professor of English Literature and Translation at Utrecht University. He has published widely on James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Jack B. Yeats, Derek Walcott, Seamus Heaney, and others. He is the Dutch translator of Samuel Beckett’s novel Watt, and Seamus Heaney’s 2006 collection District and Circle. As a poet, he was the winner of the 2012 Turing National Poetry Award. His work is published by Atlas Contact Publishers in Amsterdam, and he is currently Director of “a long the krommerun: the XXIV International James Joyce Symposium 2014,” hosted by Utrecht University.

Garry Leonard is Professor of English and Film at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Reading “Dubliners” Again: A Lacanian Perspective, Advertising and Commodity Culture in James Joyce, and recent essays on Joyce and Jean Rhys. He is currently working on a book entitled Writing With Lightning: Modernism and Modernity at the Movies.

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...

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