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  • Contributors

ADAM BARROWS is Associate Professor in the Department of English and Director of the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. He is the author of The Cosmic Time of Empire: Modern Britain and World Literarature and Time, Literature, and Cartography after the Spatial Turn: The Chronometric Imaginary (forthcoming from Palgrave Macmillan).

JORDAN BROWER received his Ph.D. degree in English and Film and Media Studies from Yale University in 2016. His other scholarly writing can be found in ELH and the Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, and he is a co-editor of the American Literature in the World anthology, forthcoming from Columbia University Press in 2016.

NATASHA ROSE CHENIER received her master’s degree in English Language and Literature from the University of British Columbia in 2014 and is applying to Ph.D. programs in 2016. Her work has appeared in the Comparative Literature Undergraduate Journal published by the University of California, Berkeley, and in Joyce Studies Annual.

PAUL CLAES taught Comparative Literature and Literary Translation at the University of Nijmegen in the Netherlands and at the University of Leuven in Belgium. He is the Dutch translator (with Mon Nys) of Ulysses and the author of A Commentary on T. S. Eliot’s Poem “The Waste Land”: The Infertility Theme and the Poet’s Unhappy Marriage.

PATRICK COLLIER is Professor of English at Ball State University, where he teaches nineteenth- and twentieth-century British literature as well as film studies. His latest book, Modern Print Artifacts: Textual Materiality and Literary Value, 1880–1930s, will be out this fall from the Edinburgh University Press. He has written widely about early-twentieth-century print culture and is the co-editor of the Journal of Modern Periodical Studies.

MARTIN CONNOLLY is Associate Professor of English at Tsurumi University, Yokohama, and has published on Ulysses in Joycean Japan. His early academic interest was in late-medieval literature, and he has written articles on Arthurian romance. He has also published on Seamus Heaney and various other subjects in the modern sub-culture. Soon to come out in Interdisciplinary Literary Studies is his study of Joycean elements in some Beatles songs. His novella, “Eri, a Japanese Ghost Story,” has been described as possessing Joycean elements of its own.

LUCA CRISPI is founding co-editor of the Dublin James Joyce Journal, with Anne Fogarty.

FINN FORDHAM is Professor of 20th Century Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London. He has published widely, with extensive work on [End Page 545] Finnegans Wake and genetic criticism. In 2012, he edited for European Joyce Studies, with Rita Sakr, the collection James Joyce and the Nineteenth Century French Novel.

DAMON FRANKE is Associate Professor of English and Coast English Program Coordinator at the University of Southern Mississippi Gulf Coast. He is the author of Modernist Heresies: British Literary History, 1883–1924, and his articles and reviews have appeared in the James Joyce Quarterly, Journal of Narrative Theory, Nineteenth-Century Prose, English Language Notes, Studies in the Novel, and SubStance. He is currently working on a study of the philosophy of “becoming” in the works of Joyce.

JONATHAN GOODWIN is Associate Professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. His website is <http://jgoodwin.net>.

PATRIZIA GRIMALDI-PIZZORNO has a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Harvard University and teaches English Literature at the Università di Siena, Italy. She has published books and articles on Middle English poetry, Dante, Geoffrey Chaucer, and Giovanni Boccaccio, and her latest book is entitled The Ways of Paradox from Lando to Donne. She is currently working on Being Essex, a text about the representations and self-representations of the Second Earl of Essex in his long struggle for recognition.

JAMES HORTON received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Edinburgh, where he worked on the relationship between stylistics and literary theory in Joyce studies.

ALISON LACIVITA received her Ph.D. degree from Trinity College Dublin, in 2012. Her articles have appeared in Joyce Studies Annual, Green Letters, and the Virginia Woolf Miscellany, and there are other pieces forthcoming from ISLE and Papers on Joyce. Her monograph The Ecology of “Finnegans Wake” was published by the...

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