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  • Notes on Contributors

MARY BURGOYNE is a Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Joseph Conrad Studies, St. Mary's University Twickenham, London. She co-edited volume 4 of Joseph Conrad: The Contemporary Reviews (Cambridge University Press, 2012), assisted on the Cambridge Edition of Last Essays, (edited by Harold Ray Stevens and J. H. Stape, 2010), and is currently co-editing, with Allan H. Simmons, The Letters of Jessie Conrad (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming).

MICHAEL JOHN DISANTO is Associate Professor of English at Algoma University. He is the author of Under Conrad's Eyes: The Novel as Criticism and the editor of The Complete Poems of George Whalley, both published by McGill-Queen's University Press. He is publishing Whalley's works online at http://georgewhalley.ca, writing a biography, and editing Whalley's correspondence.

ANNE LUYAT has taught at Université d'Avignon and the Université de Grenoble in France. She has published numerous articles and chapters on Conrad's work.

ALEX MCCAULEY studies nineteenth-century literature at the University of Washington. He is writing a dissertation on drowning.

JEFFREY MEYERS, FRSL, has had thirty-three books translated into fourteen languages and seven alphabets, and published on six continents. He's recently published Robert Lowell in Love and The Mystery of the Real: Correspondence with Alex Colville in 2016, and Resurrections: Authors, Heroes—and a Spy in 2018.

SEAMUS O'MALLEY is an Assistant Professor of English at Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University. His book Making History New: Modernism and Historical Narrative was published by Oxford University Press in 2015. He has also published on W.B. Yeats, Ford Madox Ford, Rebecca West, Robert Louis Stevenson, Frank McGuinness, Edmund Wilson, D.H. Lawrence, and Alan Moore, and co-edited the volume Ford Madox Ford and America (Rodopi, 2012). He is currently co-editing a research companion to Ford for Routledge, and writing a book on populism in Irish literature.

YOKO OKUDA is Professor of English Literature in the Faculty of Humanities at Atomi University, Tokyo, and she is a member of the Executive Committee of the Joseph Conrad Society of Japan. She has published various articles in The Conradian, L'Epoque Conradienne, Yearbook of Conrad Studies (Poland), and Conrad Studies (Japan). She is currently working on a book on the emotional sub-text of Conrad's works.

NIC PANAGOPOULOS is Assistant Professor of English Literature & Culture at the Department of English Language & Literature, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. He is the author of The Fiction of Joseph Conrad: The Influence of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche (1998), and Heart of Darkness and The Birth of Tragedy: A Comparative Study (2002). Besides his work on Conrad, he has published on a wide range of canonical writers, such as Shakespeare, Swift, Byron, Dickens, Huxley, and Beckett.

BRIAN RICHARDSON is a Professor in the English Department of the University of Maryland. He is the author of five books and editor of eight other volumes, including Unnatural Voices: Extreme Narration in Modern and Contemporary Fiction (2006), Narrative Beginnings: Theories and Practices (2008), and a special issue of Conradiana on "Conrad and the Reader" in 2003. He has written numerous articles and book chapters on twentieth-century authors, particularly Joseph Conrad; these explore the topics of narration, class, chance, plot, endings, silence, and the act of reading in Conrad's fiction. He served as vice president and president of the Joseph Conrad Society of America from 2006 to 2011 and is currently working on a book on Conrad and narrative.

JOHAN ADAM WARODELL is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London. He has published articles on Joseph Conrad in The Cambridge Quarterly, The Conradian, Conradiana, English, Notes & Queries, and the Yearbook of Conrad Studies. His writing has won prizes from the Joseph Conrad Societies of the UK and USA. He is presently completing a monograph on Conrad.

After service in the Royal Navy, CEDRIC WATTS took a first-class BA degree and a doctorate at Cambridge University. He is currently Emeritus Professor of English, University of Sussex. He has written several books on Conrad, and has edited numerous volumes of Conrad's writings. His novel Final Exam (by "Peter Green...

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