'Paul Giles, Challis Professor of English at The University of Sydney, is recognised as a major figure in transnational literary criticism with specific reference to the US, Britain and now Australia. He has produced a formidable body of scholarly work since the mid-1980s, beginning with a study of Hart Crane (1986), followed by American Catholic Arts and Fictions (1992), which explored the role of Catholicism in literature and film as a counterweight to the dominance of Protestantism in the US cultural imaginary. Three major interrelated monographs, appearing in the 2000s, established Giles’s reputation in the forefront of transatlantic studies: Transatlantic Insurrections (2001), Virtual Americas (2002), and Atlantic Republic (2006). A further monograph entitled Antipodean America, on the transpacific and Australasian dimensions of American literature,was published in December 2013.
'His other publications include The Global Remapping of American Literature (2010); and Transnationalism in Practice: Essays on American Studies, Literature and Religion (2010).' (Source: The Australian Academy of the Humanities website)