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  • Notes on Contributors

PATRICK CALLAN is a historian of early twentieth-century Dublin and Ireland. In recent times, he has turned his attention to the representation of Dublin in Ulysses, and the broadcasting of Joyce's work on the BBC. His work on Joycean themes has been published by the James Joyce Quarterly, the Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, and Studi Irlandesi: A Journal of Irish Studies. He is a visiting research fellow in the Trinity Research Centre for Contemporary Irish History at Trinity College Dublin, and an occasional lecturer in education at Maynooth University.

JACQUES CHUTO is a Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Paris-Est. After studying at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, he wrote his PhD thesis on 'James Clarence Mangan, poète-traducteur' for the University of Paris 3-Sorbonne nouvelle. He co-edited the six volumes of the Collected Works of James Clarence Mangan (1996–2002), one volume of Mangan's Selected Poems (2003), one of his Selected Prose (2004), and is the author of James Clarence Mangan: A Bibliography of his Works (1999). He has been for some time studying Mangan's presence in Joyce's works and has published an essay, '"Araby": What's in a Name?' (2016). In the non-academic field, he has translated into French many poems by Derek Mahon, a selection of which has appeared, with introduction and notes, under the title La Mer hivernale (2013).

JOHN CONLAN is a lecturer at Maynooth University. His work on Joyce and evolutionary theory appears in the journal Costellazioni, and his article on Flann O'Brien and local government is in The Parish Review: a Journal of Flann O'Brien Studies. He also in collaboration with the Notre Dame Medieval Institute Research Blog examined questions of ethno-nationalism in Joyce's relationship with Scandinavian historiography. Currently he is working on a monograph on scientific vitalism and European politics in mid-century modernist fiction.

LEAH FLACK is Professor and Chair of English at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA. Her areas of study include classical reception studies, comparative modernist studies, James Joyce, Irish and Russian literature, and more recently, contemporary women's historical fiction.

MARY GALLAGHER is Professor of French and Francophone Studies at University College Dublin. She has published over one hundred critical studies in four main fields of research and reflection: academic ethics, postcolonial critique, translingualism and translation, writing and global migration. Her book-length publications include La Créolité de Saint-John Perse (Paris: Gallimard, 1998), Soundings in French Caribbean Writing since 1950 (Oxford University Press, 2002), World Writing: Poetics, Ethics, Globalization (University of Toronto Press, 2008) and, most recently, the English translation and critical edition of Paul Morand's Caribbean Winter (Signal Books, 2018). Her work on Paul Léon reflects her interest not just in translation, but also in migrant writing and in the ethics of transnational and transcontinental intellectual resistance.

KEN HANNIGAN retired as Keeper in the National Archives of Ireland in 2009. He was joint editor, with William Nolan, of Wicklow History and Society (Dublin: Geography Publications, 1994), a volume in the Irish County History series. He is a founder member of Wicklow Historical Society and a founder and Honorary President of the Irish Labour History Society.

GEERT LERNOUT is Emeritus Professor at the University of Antwerp where he taught English and comparative literature. He published books in English on the French Joyce, on Joyce's relationship to religion, and on Joyce and Byron. In Dutch he has published books on religion, Bach's Goldberg Variations and the history of the book. With Vincent Deane and Daniel Ferrer he edited twelve volumes of the Finnegans Wake Notebooks, with Wim Van Mierlo The Reception of James Joyce in Europe (two volumes). He is a member of the Academia Europaea, general editor of the Brill series on James Joyce, and has published numerous articles in scholarly and more popular journals.

SANGAM MACDUFF is a Research Fellow at the University of Lausanne. His research, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation, focuses on logic and modern literature from 1850 to the present. His monograph, Panepiphanal World: James Joyce's Epiphanies, was published by...

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