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  • Contributors

The latest of Sheldon Brivic’s four books on Joyce is Joyce’s Waking Woman: An Introduction to Finnegans Wake. He is now completing a book called Tears of Rage: The Racial Interface of Modern American Fiction, and his next book will be on Joyce’s Portrait of the Artist.

Lynda K. Bundtzen is Herbert H. Lehman Professor of English at Williams College, where she has taught since 1972 in a wide variety of fields, including Shakespeare, literature by women, feminist theory, and film. She is the author of two books on Sylvia Plath: Plath’s Incarnations: Women and the Creative Process, published in 1983, won the 1980 [dates?] Hamilton Prize from the University of Michigan Press, and The Other Ariel will be published in October 2001 by the University of Massachusetts Press.

Patricia Cockram is Assistant Professor of English at Lehman College of the City University of New York, specializing in twentieth-century literature. She is a contributing editor of the Ezra Pound Encyclopedia and has published in American and European journals. Forthcoming publications include a pamphlet on Pound’s French publisher, the author and critic Dominique deRoux, and a book on Pound and de Roux scheduled for French publication in 2002.

John Cussen teaches English at Edinboro University in Pennsylvania. He has published full—length articles in Yeats: An Annual of Critical and Textual Studies, Critic, the New Hibernian Review, the Journal of Kentucky Studies, the Yeats Journal of Korea; reviews and short pieces in Studies in Short Fiction, Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature, and The Explicator. He has published fiction in Ambergris, Ascent, Confrontation, the Cream City Review, and Fiction.

Bill Freind is Visiting Professor of English at Providence College. He is working on a book on the role of history in twentieth-century poetry.

Matthew K. Gold is a Ph.D. Candidate in English at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is writing his dissertation on the relationship between literature and photography in nineteenth-century America. He has taught at Lehman College and is currently working as a CUNY Technology Fellow.

Bethany Hicok, Assistant Professor of English at Mount St. Clare College in Clinton, Iowa, has also published an article on Elizabeth Bishop and her experiences at Vassar in the 1930s. Her current projects include a book-length study on the relationship between twentieth-century American women poets and the women’s college experience, as well as a study of Ezra Pound in Italy.

Raphaël Ingelbien was Larkin Memorial Scholar at the University of Hull between 1996 and 1999. He is currently a part-time lecturer at the University of Louvain-la Neuve, Belgium. He has published various articles on modern British Poetry and on Henry James, Virginia Woolf, and Michael Ondaatje.

Annette Shandler Levitt is Professor of English at Drexel University. Her book The Genres and Genders of Surrealism was recently published by St. Martin’s Press.

Morton P. Levitt is Professor of English at Temple University and has been Editor of the Journal of Modern Literature since 1986.

W.H. New teaches Postcolonial Literatures at the University of British Columbia. For eighteen years he served as Editor of Canadian Literature. His books include Dreams of Speech and Violence: The Art of the Short Story in Canada and New Zealand, A History of Canadian Literature, Reading Mansfield and Metaphors of Form, Vanilla Gorilla (for children), and three books of poems: Science Lessons, Raucous, and Stone Rain.

Robin Peel is a Principal Lecturer in English at the University of Plymouth in England. His most recent publication is Questions of English, which he co-authored with Annette Patterson and Jeanne Gerlach.

David Pichaske (Ph.D., Ohio University) is Professor of English at Southwest State University in Marshall, Minnesota. He was a senior Fulbright Lecturer in Lodz, Poland, from 1989 to 1991, and in Riga, Latvia, from 1997 to 1998. His books include Beowulf to Beatles (1972), A Generation in Motion (1979), Late Harvest (1991), and Poland in Transition (1994). His scholarly essays have appeared in Chaucer Review, Studies in English Literature, Popular Music and Society, and elsewhere.

Christopher Pollnitz lectures in English at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales...

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