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Genders 34
2001
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
SRIPARNA BASU teaches English at the National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata, India. She is currently working on a book project on nationalism and citizenship in Indian women's writing in English and Bengali, and completing an anthology of Muslim women's writings in pre-partition Bengal, translated into English.
EVAN R. FIRESTONE teaches art history at the University of Georgia in Athens. His essays have appeared in such journals as American Art, Archives of American Art Journal, Art Journal, and Arts Magazine. Currently he is working on a study of androgyny in mid-twentieth century American art.
JEANNE E. HAMMING is a doctoral candidate in English at West Virginia University where she studies masculine subjectivity and environment in twentieth-century American fiction. In addition to her doctoral research, Jeanne Hamming is part of a multimedia project, Mariner10, which develops educational titles for interdisciplinary study. Publications include "Dildonics, Dykes, and the Detachable Masculine" forthcoming in the European Journal of Women Studies.
ANNAMARIE JAGOSE is a member of Genders' Editorial Board and Senior Lecturer in the Department of English with Cultural Studies at the University of Melbourne. Her next book, Inconsequence: Lesbian Representation and the Logic of Sequence, will be published in 2002 by Cornell University Press. Laura Doan will become Reader in Women's Studies at Manchester University in 2002. She has edited several collections, including, with Lucy Bland, Sexology Uncensored: The Documents of Sexual Science and Sexology in Culture: Labelling Bodies and Desires (University of Chicago Press, 1998) as well as a forthcoming volume with Jay Prosser, Palatable Poison: Critical Perspectives on The Well of Loneliness (Columbia University Press).
CHRISTOPHER KOCELA is a doctoral candidate in the department of English at McGill University. His dissertation focuses on fetishism in the postmodern American novel. He has also written an article on lesbian fetishism in Thomas Pynchon's V., which is forthcoming in Pynchon Notes.
ALLYSON D. POLSKY works in the area of cultural studies of science, medicine, and technology. She is currently Assistant Professor of English at Quinnipiac University.
JOSHUA M. PRICE is on the faculty in the Division of Human Development at the State University of New York at Binghamton. He is also a staff member at the Escuela Popular Norteña, a center for popular education located in Valdez, New Mexico.
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