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  • Contributors

MORRIS BEJA is the author of Epiphany in the Modern Novel; Film and Literature; James Joyce: A Literary Life; and Tell Us About … A Memoir, and of numerous essays on Joyce, film, and Irish, British, and American fiction. He has edited or co-edited volumes of essays on James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Samuel Beckett, and Orson Welles, and on cinematic narrative. The International James Joyce Founda tion has presented him a Lifetime Achievement Award and has appointed him an Honorary Trustee for Life. He has directed or co-directed numerous international conferences, one on Beckett and seven on Joyce.

VALÉRIE BÉNÉJAM is Maître de Conférences in English Literature at the University of Nantes, France. A former student of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, she has written many articles about Joyce’s work, which have appeared in the James Joyce Quarterly and European Joyce Studies, in various French journals such as Études Britanniques Contemporaines and Tropismes, and online in Genetic Joyce Studies and Hypermedia Joyce Studies. She has co-edited with John Bishop a collection of articles on the issue of Joyce’s representations, across his work, of spatiality and space entitled Making Space in the Works of James Joyce and is currently writing a study of the role of theater and drama in Joyce’s fiction entitled Joyce’s Novel Theatre and co-editing a collection on Joyce and cognitive sciences. She is an elected trustee of the International James Joyce Foundation.

ROBERT COLSON is Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Humanities at Brigham Young University. His research and teaching focus on modernist and postcolonial fiction. His work on Joyce has appeared in John Huston as Adaptor. He also writes about African fiction and dictatorship in essays in ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature, Research in African Literatures, and the collection Unmasking the African Dictator. His current book project, Novel Forms of Nationalism, examines questions of nationalism and narrative form in the work of modernist and postcolonial novelists.

TIM CONLEY is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Brock University. He is the author of Joyces Mistakes: Problems of Intention, Irony, and Interpretation, the editor of Joyce’s Disciples Disciplined, and the co-editor of Doubtful Points: Joyce and Punctuation and, with Onno Kosters and Peter de Voogd, of a long the krommerun: Selected Papers from the Utrecht James Joyce Symposium. His latest work is entitled Useless Joyce: Textual Functions, Cultural Appropriations to be published by the University of Toronto Press in 2017.

CLAIRE A. CULLETON is Professor of British and James Joyce Quarterly, Volume 53, Number 1-2 (Fall 2015-Winter 2016), pp. 171-173. Copyright © for the JJQ, University of Tulsa, 2017. All rights to reproduction in any form are reserved. [End Page 171] Irish Literature at Kent State University. Her most recent book is a co-edited collection of essays entitled Rethinking Joyce’s “Dubliners.”

MARCIA K. FARRELL left a tenured associate-professor position to work as the Librarian/Research Scholar at Mercyhurst Preparatory School in Erie, Pennsylvania, where she spends her days learning about book repair, preservation, building archives, and collection management while enjoying the educational enthusiasm of high school students, making this the best decision of her life. She continues to be an active scholar, with publications in ARIEL, South Asian Review, and Modern Fiction Studies. She has a forthcoming article about contemporary stitching fiction in Studies in Popular Culture.

MICHAEL FRAZER is a Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow in the English Department at Auburn University, where he recently completed his doctorate. His current research focuses on queer identity and play in the modern avant-garde, especially in Surrealism and its offshoots.

MICHAEL GRODEN is Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at Western University, Canada. He is the author of “Ulysses” in Progress and “Ulysses” in Focus and the General Editor of The James Joyce Archive.

ERIN HOLLIS is Associate Professor in the Department of English, Comparative Literature, and Linguistics at California State University, Fullerton, as well as the current Faculty in Residence for Housing and Residence Life on campus. She is currently finishing a book on love in the Harry Potter series and the works of James Joyce...

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