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  • Contributors

Morris Beja is Emeritus Professor of English at Ohio State University. He received the Lifetime Service Award from the International James Joyce Foundation in 2010. Among his books on Joyce is James Joyce: A Literary Life. His most recent book is Tell Us About . . . A Memoir.

Valérie Bénéjam is Maître de Conférences in English Literature at the University of Nantes. She has written many articles about Joyce and recently co-edited, with John Bishop, a collection of essays, Making Space in the Works of James Joyce, on the issue of Joyce’s representations, across his work, of spatiality and space. She is currently working on a monograph about Joyce’s fiction and theatricality entitled Joyce’s Novel Theatre.

Roy Benjamin teaches English at the Borough of Manhattan Community College. His articles on Finnegans Wake and various other subjects have appeared in the Journal of Modern Literature, Joyce Studies Annual, and the Irish Studies Review.

Tim Conley is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Brock University in Canada. His most recent books include his edited essay collection Joyce’s Disciples Disciplined, the short fiction collection Nothing Could Be Further, and the anthology Burning City: Poems of Metropolitan Modernity, co-edited with Jed Rasula and published in January 2012.

Richard Corballis has recently retired from Massey University. Until now, he has focused on a few of Joyce’s minor matters, including essays entitled “Joyce’s Debt to Oscar in ‘Ulysses,’” “The Provenance of Joyce’s Haka,” and the current “Who Taught Molly to Say ‘Yes’?” He is finishing two books about New Zealand and then hopes to return to Joyce, this time establishing a full-length study of the man.

Richard J. Gerber and his wife Margy run R & M Gerber Books (<rmgerberbooks.com>), a site specializing in buying and selling modern first editions, with an emphasis on James Joyce.

Sonja Jankov graduated with a degree in Comparative Literature from the University of Novi Sad and has spent a year at the Centres for Intercultural and Irish Studies at Karlova Univerzita in Prague. She is currently enrolled in a postgraduate course in the Theory of Culture at the University of Belgrade. Her publications include a book of poetry and essays on James Joyce, culture, and art. She is a member of the International Flann O’Brien Society.

Joseph Kelly is a scholar at the College of Charleston. Currently, he is working on a series of a biographical articles on James Joyce and a book on slavery and dissent in the antebellum South.

Jim LeBlanc is Director of Library Technical Services at the Cornell [End Page 203] University Library. He is the author of several essays on Joyce, as well as work on library science, popular music, and existential phenomenology. He served as Director of the 2005 North American James Joyce Conference at Cornell and as Academic Coordinator for the 2011 North American James Joyce Conference held at the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens and the California Institute of Technology.

Simon Loekle lives in New York City, where he is known for his presentations on Joyce and other authors. His “dazibao” on matters Joycean have appeared in the newsletters of the James Joyce Society and are a regular feature of the James Joyce Quarterly.

Zena Meadowsong is Assistant Professor of English Literature at Rowan University. Her work on experimental nineteenth- and twentieth-century fiction has appeared in Studies in American Naturalism, Nineteenth-Century Literature, and The Oxford Handbook of American Literary Naturalism, and she is currently working on a book project entitled Mechanization and the Making of the Modern Novel: Naturalism, Modernism, Postmodernism. The book focuses on the relationship between the historical process of mechanization and the novel form, connecting narrative experimentation in the late-nineteenth-century naturalist novel to the development of twentieth-century modernism and postmodernism.

Megeen R. Mulholland received her Ph.D. in English from the University at Albany and her M.A. in English and Creative Writing from the State University of New York at Binghamton. She is Assistant Professor of English at Hudson Valley Community College where she has been nominated for the President’s Award for Excellence...

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