Dominika Buchowska-Greaves is the author of “A Sense of Form”: The Art of David Bomberg (2015), and Negotiating Modernism: Art Criticism in The New Age 1907-1922 (2019). She is an Associate Professor at the Department of English and Irish Literature and Literary Linguistics at the Faculty of English, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland, where she teaches English Literature and Culture, and British Art. Her research interests are British modernist and avant-garde art and literature, little magazines, art criticism, as well as connections between poetry and painting. She has written a number of publications on the formation of the London avant-garde at around 1914, the art of David Bomberg, Wyndham Lewis, the “Whitechapel Boys”, Vorticism, Polish Futurism, the art and poetry of the Great War.Christine Reynier is Professor Emerita of English Literature at Université de Montpellier Paul-Valéry, France. She has published on major modernist writers as well as neglected ones (Woolf, West, Holtby, Sackville-West, S.T. Warner, du Maurier, etc.). She edited books and journals on Woolf and published her first monograph, Virginia Woolf's Ethics of the Short Story (Palgrave Macmillan) in 2009. Her latest publications include Reconnecting Aestheticism and Modernism, co-edited with Bénédicte Coste and Catherine Delyfer (Routledge, 2017), Modernist Non-fictional Narratives of War and Peace (1914-1950), co-edited with Adrian Paterson (Erea 17.2, 2020), Short Fiction as Humble Fiction (Short Fiction in Theory and Practice 10.2, February 2021), and Revisiting the Periodical Essay (1860-1940), with Bénédicte Coste (E-rea, 20.2 (2023). Recently, she has published a second monograph, Virginia Woolf’s Good Housekeeping Essays (Routledge, 2019) and the first critical edition in France of A Room of One’s Own translated by Marie Darieussecq (Un lieu à soi, Gallimard, 2020). Her latest edited volume, with Xavier Le Brun, and with a foreword by Terry Gifford, Modernism and Matter, was published by PULM, the Presses Universitaires de Montpellier, in 2025.