NOTES ON AUTHORS
Tom Boland defended his PhD thesis entitled ‘The Romanticism of Critical
Subjectivity’ in sociology at the National University of Ireland, Cork (2006). His is
currently lecturing at Waterford Institute of Technology. His articles and essays were
published among others in the European Journal of Social Theory (2006), Culture, Theory and
Critique (2007), History of the Human Sciences (2007), and Textual Practice (2009). His research
interests focus on social theory, the sociology of literature, the problem of critique and
the process of identity formation.
Margaret Harper (PhD, MA at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
is Professor at the Department of English (University of Limerick, Ireland). She studies
and teaches Irish and American literature of the long twentieth century, modernisms,
modern and contemporary poetry, and transnational feminist theory, as well as editing
scholarly editions of the works and manuscripts of Yeats, including his philosophical
book, A Vision (1925), Volume 13 of The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats, (New York, 2008,
co-editor).
Agnes Horvath has a PhD in social and political sciences at the European
University Institute in Florence (2000), and teaches political anthropology at the Catholic
University of Milan. Her research interests focus on matters related to mimesis,
schismogenetic moments and trickster formations. Her publications include articles, and
book chapters in Hungarian, English, Italian and French, most recently “The Trickster
Motive in Renaissance Political Thought” (Philosophia, 2007), “Mythology and the
Trickster: interpreting communism” (Routledge, 2008), and “Pulcinella, or the
metaphysics of the nulla: In between politics and theatre” (History of the Human Sciences,
2010) as well as two co-authored books Senkiföldjén (On the No Man’s Land) (Budapest,
Akadémiai, 1989) and The Dissolution of Communist Power (London, Routledge, 1992).
John McNamara has a PhD from Sociology at University College Cork, Ireland,
where he is currently temporary lecturer. His thesis examined the origins of American
nationalism and the religious influence on the making of America, and is currently
preparing a monograph (“American Genesis: Nationalism’s Secular Hierophany”) based
on his PhD thesis. His fields of interest include, politics, religion, race and ethnicity, and
nationalism, focusing in particular on anthropological interpretations of nationalist
devotion in the United States.
Matthias Riedl is Assistant Professor at the History Department of Central
European University, Budapest, and Chair of Comparative Religious Studies. He holds a
PhD from University, Erlangen-Nuremberg/Germany. He is (with Tilo Schabert) coorganizer
of the interdisciplinary and intercivilizational Eranos Conferences and co-editor
of the Eranos volumes. Before coming to Budapest, he taught at University Erlangen-
Nuremberg, Germany, and Duke University, Durham/USA. His research interests are in
the history of Western Christianity, the relation of religion and politics, and political
theology in intercivilizational perspective. He is author of a monograph on the 12th
century apocalyptic writer Joachim of Fiore (2004), author of various articles on the history
of religious and political thought, and co-editor of volumes on Prophets and Prophecies
(2005), Humans at War, at Peace with Nature (2006), Religions - The Religious Experience (2008),
God or Gods? (2009), The Apocalyptic Complex (forthcoming), and Brill's Companion to Joachim
of Fiore (forthcoming).
Arpad Szakolczai is Professor of Sociology at the National University of Ireland,
Cork. His recent and major publications include The Dissolution of Communist Power
(Routledge, 1992, co-authored), Max Weber and Michel Foucault: Parallel Life-Works
(Routledge, 1998), Reflexive Historical Sociology (Routledge, 2000), La scoperta della società
(Rome, Carocci, 2003, co-authored), The Genesis of Modernity (Routledge, 2003), and
Sociology, Religion and Grace: A Quest for the Renaissance (Routledge, 2007), as well as articles
and essays among others in Social Research, the American Journal of Sociology, the British Journal
of Political Science, the International Review of Sociology, International Sociology, Theory, Culture and
Society, Theoria, Current Sociology, The European Journal of Social Theory and The European
Sociological Review.
James Cuffe is currently finishing his PhD at University College Cork. He is
investigating the role of communications technology in social change in contemporary China. His
research interests include: Communication & Technology in contemporary and ancient societies
and exploring theory in anthropology. He is published in Chinese and English on Sino-Irish
relations. He also works as an Anthropology Consultant for Irish firms dealing with Chinese
culture and society.


