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  • Contributors

ROBERT BERRY is the Philadelphia-based cartoonist behind ULYSSES “seen,” the ambitious project aimed at fully adapting Joyce’s novel into a visual learning platform. His artworks have been shown in Bloomsday celebrations all over the world where they have helped to unite Joyce devotees both new and learned. He teaches at the University of Pennsylvania and occasionally gets the chance to make pretty pictures.

M. ANGELES CONDE-PARRILLA is Professor of English and Literary Translation at the Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Spain. Her main research interests are in postcolonial translation studies, creative and cultural aspects in literary translation, and linguistic variation. She has published “Hiberno-English and Identity in Joyce’s A Portrait” in Language and Literature, as well as several articles and reviews on the translation of Joyce’s texts into Spanish, some of them in the JJQ.

RONAN CROWLEY is FWO [PEGASUS]2 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow at the Centre for Manuscript Genetics, University of Antwerp. He received his Ph.D. degree in English from the University at Buffalo in 2014 and from 2014–2016 was the Humboldt Research Fellow at the University of Passau.

JONATHAN GOLDMAN is Associate Professor of English at the New York Institute of Technology, author of Modernism Is the Literature of Celebrity, co-editor of Modernist Star Maps: Celebrity, Modernity, Culture, and editor of Joyce and the Law. His work on Joyce includes guest-editing the “Legal Joyce” Summer 2013 issue of the JJQ and writing articles and reviews published in The Cambridge Companion to “Ulysses,” the JJQ, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, The Paris Review, Kult Magazine, The James Joyce Broadsheet, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. See his Twitter account—@jonnysemicolon—and website—<Jonathanegoldman.com>.

EMILY HERSHMAN recently completed her Ph.D. degree in twentieth-century British and Irish Studies at the University of Notre Dame. She is working on a book about gender and warfare in British and Irish modernism.

GRANT MATTHEW JENKINS, Associate Professor of English, teaches contemporary literature, theory, and creative writing at the University of Tulsa. He is the author of Poetic Obligation: Ethics in Experimental American Poetry after 1945 and the manuscript under consideration, Other Wise: Ethics in African American Poetry After the Civil Rights Movement.

NATHAN A. JUNG is a Lecturer at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His research interests include diaspora studies, transnational literature, textual studies, and the digital humanities, and his work has been published in journals including Ariel: A [End Page 501] Review of International English Literature and The Journal of Commonwealth Literature.

DEREK P. LEE is a postdoctoral fellow of English Literature at Penn State University. His current book project examines occult theories of consciousness in twentieth-century literature and science. His work has appeared in Configurations, the Journal of Literature and Science, the Journal of Modern Literature, and Critique.

ELENI LOUKOPOULOU completed her Ph.D. degree at the University of Kent. She is the author of a monograph entitled Up to Maughty London: Joyce’s Cultural Capital in the Imperial Metropolis.

JENNIFER MARCHISOTTO is a Ph.D. candidate in Literatures in English at the University of California, San Diego. Her work focuses on mental disability in twentieth century Irish and Caribbean literatures and takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the context of cultural institutions in emerging global communities. Her work has appeared in the Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies.

CAREY MICKALITES is Associate Professor of English at the University of Memphis, specializing in modernism, contemporary British fiction, and cultural theory. He is the author of Modernism and Market Fantasy: British Fictions of Capital, 1910–1939, as well as numerous articles on twentieth-century and contemporary literature.

ERIKA MIHÁLYCSA lectures on twentieth- and twenty-first-century British and Irish literature at Babeş-Bolyai University, in Cluj, Romania. A James Joyce and Samuel Beckett scholar and winner of multiple scholarships at the Zurich Joyce Foundation, she has participated in Joyce symposia at both the Trieste and Dublin Joyce schools. She has published on Joyce’s and Beckett’s language poetics, Joyce in translation, and Beckett and the visual arts, as well as on the field of...

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