Notes on Contributors
Editors
Elżbieta Jamróz-Stolarska is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Information and Media Studies (University of WrocÅaw). She has published widely on the childrenâs book market, design and illustration. Her major recent work is Serie literackie dla dzieci i mÅodzieży w Polsce 1945â1989. Produkcja wydawnicza i uksztaÅtowanie edytorskie [Childrenâs and Young Adultsâ Literature Series in Poland 1945â1989: Book Market and Design] (Warszawa, 2014).
Mateusz Åwietlicki is an Assistant Professor at the University of WrocÅawâs Institute of English Studies and Director of the Center for Young Peopleâs Literature and Culture. His research interests include Canadian, American, and Ukrainian childrenâs and YA literature and culture, gender studies, popular culture, and film. His most recent book, Next-Generation Memory and Ukrainian Canadian Childrenâs Historical Fiction: The Seeds of Memory (Routledge, 2023) examines the transnational entanglements of Canada and Ukraine.
Agata Zarzycka is an Associate Professor at the Institute of English Studies (University of WrocÅaw). She has recently published A Goth Reflection: Self-Fashioning and Popular Culture (WrocÅaw, 2019). Her research interests include literary studies focused on speculative fiction, gothic studies, game studies focused on video games and role-playing games, fan studies, subcultural and cultural studies.
The editors are co-founders and members of The Centre for Research on Childrenâs and Young Adult Literature at the University of WrocÅaw.
Contributors
Bożena Hojka is an Assistant Professor at the University of WrocÅaw (Poland). Her research interests concern the relationship between text and image in various types of publications, with particular emphasis on educational books for children, widely understood publishing and communication theory. Currently she is conducting research on picture- and illustrated dictionaries for children. She is a member of The Centre for Research on Childrenâs and Young Adult Literature at the University of WrocÅaw.
Monika Woźniak is an Associate Professor of Polish Language and Literature at the University of Rome âLa Sapienzaâ. Her research focuses on Literary Translation, Childrenâs Literature and Translation and Audiovisual Translation. She has published widely on all these topics. Recently, she co-authored a monography on Italian reception of Henryk Sienkiewiczâs Quo vadis (120 lat recepcji âQuo vadisâ Henryka Sienkiewicza we WÅoszech, 2020) and co-edited (with Maria Wyke) a volume on Quo vadis for Oxford University Press (The Novel of Neronian Rome and its Multimedial Transformations, 2020).
Hanna Dymel-Trzebiatowska is an Associate Professor at the Department of Scandinavian and Finnish Studies of the University of GdaÅsk, Poland. The focal points of her studies are Nordic childrenâs literature, picturebooks, translation and theory of translation. Apart from books on Swedish grammar, translation theory and reading therapy she co-edited The Picturebook: a mirror of social changes (2016), The Picturebook. Introduction (2017), The Picturebook. Lexicon 1 (2018).
Snizhana Zhygun s an Associate Professor at Borys Grinchenko Kyiv University (Ukraine) and a researcher at Taras Shevchenko Institute of Literature of Ukrainian National Academy of Science. She is interested in literary theory, Ukrainian literature of the 20th century, and ideological influences on texts and those caused by texts.
Sylwia KamiÅska-MaciÄ g is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Slavic Studies at the University of WrocÅaw. Her scientific interests include Russian fantasy literature of the 19th century, esotericism, psychoanalysis in literature, Russian childrenâs and youth literature, historical fiction, and memory studies.
Meni Kanatsouli is a Full Professor at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece) where she teaches childrenâs literature. Her most representative papers are: âAspects of the Greek Childrenâs Novel: 1974â1994â, CLA-Quarterly (20. 3), 1995: 121â125; âCensorship in Greece: 1974 to the Presentâ, PARA.DOXA (2.3), 1996: 397â402; and âGames Inside Books for Young Childrenâ, Bookbird (50, 4), October 2012: 33â40.
Talia E. Crockett received her PhD in English Literature from the Victoria University of Wellington in 2023. Prior, she received her HonBA in English from the University of Toronto and worked in the Canadian publishing and film criticism industries. Her research focuses on literary representations of trauma and contemporary trauma theory, Holocaust literature, and settler colonial literature.
Joanna Dybiec-Gajer is an Associate Professor at the Pedagogical University of Kraków, where she is Head of the Chair for Translator Education. Her main research interest concern translating for younger audiences, contemporary translation practices, amateur translation, and translator training. Her recent book publications include coedited volumes Negotiating Translation and Transcreation of Childrenâs Literature: From Alice to the Moomins (2020) and Mediating Practices in Translating for Children: Tackling Controversial Topics (2021).
Barbara KaczyÅska is a translator, university teacher, and PhD candidate at the Faculty of Applied Linguistics of the University of Warsaw. She holds a masterâs degree in applied linguistics and history. She has conducted research on metafiction in childrenâs literature and other media, and on medieval Polish lexicography. Currently, she is working on a doctoral dissertation about the reception of classic French fairy tales in Polish childrenâs literature from 1768 to 2018.
Charlotte van Bergen has obtained a masterâs degree in childrenâs literature from Tilburg University in 2018, and has finished a research master in historical, literary, and cultural studies at Radboud University in 2021. She was an intern at the Centre for Research on Childrenâs and Young Adult Literature at the University of WrocÅaw in 2018â2019. Currently, she works for the Dutch Research Council.
Jennifer Mooney is an Assistant Professor in the School of English, Dublin City University. She is chair of its MA in Childrenâs and Young Adult Literature degree programme and co-director of the Centre for Research in Childrenâs and Young Adult Literature. Jenniferâs teaching and research interests include gender and sexuality in young adult literature and popular culture, recent critical concerns with posthumanism and ecocriticism, and Irish studies.
Anna Bugajska is an Associate Professor at the Jesuit University Ignatianum in Krakow. The Head of the Institute of the Modern Languages and the Language and Culture Studies Department; cooperates with the General and Applied Ethics Department. She is interested in biopolitics, bioethics, philosophy of science and technology, and crossover and fantastic fiction.
Katarzyna SmyczyÅska is an Assistant Professor at Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Her current research interests and publications focus upon ethics in contemporary visual narratives. She teaches courses in visual storytelling, media studies, and contemporary Anglophone literature and culture. In recent years she has published a number of academic articles and book chapters on contemporary visual literature, including a two-author book with Magdalena Sikorska (Tako 2019).
Angela Yannicopoulou is a Full Professor of childrenâs literature at National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. Her research interests include ideology in childrenâs literature, visual literacy, and picturebooks. She has published many papers and books on childrenâs literature and literacy.
Anna Czabanowska-Wróbel is a Titular Professor at the Faculty of Polish Studies, Jagiellonian University in Kraków. She is a researcher of Modernist literature, contemporary poetry and childrenâs literature and the founder and head of the Childrenâs and Youth Literature Research Centre at Jagiellonian University. She is the author of six books and editor/co-editor of numerous volumes, including a series devoted to imagination in childrenâs literature.