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  • Contributors

PAUL ARMSTRONG is Professor of English at Brown University. His most recent books are Stories and the Brain: The Neuroscience of Narrative (2020) and a Norton Critical Edition of E. M. Forster, A Passage to India (2021).

G. W. STEPHEN BRODSKY is author of Joseph Conrad’s Polish Soul (2016); his articles and reviews on Conrad (including a review of the Cambridge Edition of Last Essays) have appeared in Conradiana, The Conradian, Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives, Joseph Conrad Today, the Jagiellonian University Conrad Year Book, Modern Fiction Studies, and Zwischen Ost und West: Joseph Conrad im europäischen Gespräch. His work in military literary culture and Renaissance drama includes Gentlemen of the Blade: A Social and Literary History of the British Army Since 1660 (1989), military memoirs, and articles in drama criticism.

ELLEN BURTON HARRINGTON is department chair and Professor of English at the University of South Alabama and is the book review editor at Conradiana. She has published on gender and popular fiction in the work of Joseph Conrad, as well as on Victorian sensation fiction and detective fiction more broadly. She is the author of Conrad’s Sensational Heroines: Gender and Representation in the Late Fiction of Joseph Conrad (Palgrave, 2017) and is working on a project on madness in Conrad.

HUNT HAWKINS is Professor Emeritus at the University of South Florida. In 2017–18 he was Fulbright Distinguished Professor at Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland. He has published numerous articles on Conrad, edited Joseph Conrad Today, and served as President of the Joseph Conrad Society of America.

MARK D. LARABEE is formerly Associate Professor of English at the U.S. Naval Academy. He is the author of The Historian’s Heart of Darkness: Reading Conrad’s Masterpiece as Social and Cultural History (2018) and Front Lines of Modernism: Remapping the Great War in British Fiction (2011); as well as essays on Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, Yasunari Kawabata, World War I art and literature, and travel writing. He is the Executive Editor of Joseph Conrad Today.

The late CLAUDE MAISONNAT was Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University Lumière-Lyon 2 (France). His latest publications include a volume on Conrad (in collaboration with Josiane Paccaud-Huguet) in the Cahiers de l’Herne collection. His own book Joseph Conrad and the Voicing of Textuality was released in 2017 in the series Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives, and he has also written an introduction to and comments on Heart of Darkness for Garnier-Flammarion (2017), again in collaboration with Paccaud-Huguet.

PETER MALLIOS is Associate Professor of English and Executive Director of the Honors College at the University of Maryland. He is the author of Our Conrad: Constituting American Modernity (2010), and has published a number of books concerning Conrad, including the Modern Library editions of The Secret Agent (2005), Almayer’s Folly (2002), and Victory (2004). He dreams of editing the Norton edition of Conrad’s Lord Jim.

SUSAN MCCREADY is Professor of French and Co-Director of the Center for the Study of War and Memory at the University of South Alabama. A specialist of the theater of the long nineteenth century, she is the author of The Limits of Performance in the French Romantic Theatre (Durham, 2007) and Staging France between the World Wars (Lexington, 2016).

SEAMUS O’MALLEY is 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 the co-editor of a research companion to Ford for Routledge (2019), the co-editor of A Place Inside Yourself: The Comics of Julie Doucet and Gabrielle Bell (University of Mississippi Press, 2019), and is currently writing a book on populism in Irish literature. He is book review editor for Last Post: A Literary Journal from the Ford Madox Ford Society.

JOHN G. PETERS, a University Distinguished Research Professor at the University of North...

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