IAN ELLISON, DOMINIC O’KEY, School of English, University of Leeds mlime@leeds.ac.uk, en10dok@leeds.ac.uk W.G. Sebald’s writing is well known for its bricolage of styles, genres, modalities, and interests. Combining fiction with photography, travel writing with memoir, and essay with historiography, Sebald’s generic complexity has engendered a variety of critical responses inside and outside of the academy. Over the past decade, the most …