Genders OnLine Journal

 

We publish essays about gender and sexuality in relation...
Genders 47    2008

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

JULIA M. WRIGHT is Canada Research Chair in European Studies at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada. Her work on the gothic has appeared in Gothic Studies, various essay collections, and her monograph Ireland, India and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Literature. She recently edited Irish Literature, 1750-1900: An Anthology (Blackwell, 2008) and is currently co-editing, with Elizabeth Sauer, Reading the Nation in English Literature: A Critical Reader for Routledge.

CHARLOTTE FAIRLIE teaches English at Wilmington College in Wilmington, Ohio. Her essay, "'Hastily Departed Brothers': Saving the Lost Son in A River Runs Through It, Highland River, and No Great Mischief," is forthcoming in the Spring 2008 issue of Scottish Studies Review.

TRACY LEMASTER is a doctoral student specializing in contemporary American and women's literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her interests include representations of girls and girls' sexuality in literature and popular culture. She recently completed a guest co-editorship with the journal Feminist Collections on a four issue special series on Girls Studies. Her work is available on-line at <http://www.inst.at/trans/16Nr/02_2/wendt-lemaster16.htm> and in other print publications.

DANIEL PUNDAY is Professor of English at Purdue University Calumet, and a member of the editorial board of Genders.  Among his publications is Narrative Bodies (Palgrave 2003), a study of how models of corporeality influence narratology.  He is currently working on a study of the U.S. novel in the contemporary media ecology. 

MICHAEL TAVEL CLARKE is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada. His recently published book, These Days of Large Things: The Culture of Size in America, 1865-1930 (Michigan 2007), addresses the American obsession with bigness at the turn of the twentieth century and its relation to changing conceptions of the body. He is currently working on a new book on the cultural history of an American icon, the little guy.

ARIANNE BURFORD earned her Ph.D. in English at the University of Arizona and is currently a full-time Faculty Lecturer in the Women's Studies Department at the University of Arizona. She is working on revising her dissertation into a book.

JENNIE KLEIN is an assistant professor of Art History at Ohio University. She is the editor of Letters from Linda M. Montano. London: Routledge, 2005 and the co-curator, along with Rebecca McGrew, of "The 21st Century Odyssey Part II: The Performance Work of Barbara T. Smith" (2005-2006). She is presently collaborating with Deidre Heddon on a history of live art in the United Kingdom.

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