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  • Contributors

James Finn Cotter, Professor of English at Mount Saint Mary College, Newburgh, New York, is the author of Inscape: The Christology and Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins (Pittsburgh, 1972) and of articles on Hopkins, Chaucer, Sidney, Salinger, and modern poetry. He has published poetry and translated The Divine Comedy (Stony Brook, 2000). He is president of the International Hopkins Association.

Brian J. Day teaches at the University of Victoria, in British Columbia, and has published on William Morris and W. B. Yeats.

Anthony H. Harrison, Professor of English at North Carolina State University, has edited The Letters of Christina Rossetti (4 vols.), authored four books on Victorian poetry, and edited several collections of critical essays on Victorian poets and poetry. He is also co-editor of the Blackwell Companion to Victorian Poetry. Currently, he is editing a collection of Christina Rossetti's work for Broadview Press and writing a book on Victorian taste.

Terence Allan Hoagwood, Professor of English at Texas A&M University, is the author of Prophecy and the Philosophy of Mind (1985); Skepticism and Ideology (1988); Byron's Dialectic (1993); A.E. Housman Revisited (1994); Politics, Philosophy, and the Production of Romantic Texts (1996); and articles on Gerard Manley Hopkins, A. E. Housman, Elinor Wylie, Ellen Glasgow, and many other writers. He is the editor of Violet Fane's Denzil Place (1996), Emily Pfeiffer'sSonnets and Songs” (1998), and other previously rare books of poetry by women.

Patricia Rigg is Associate Professor of English at Acadia University, Nova Scotia. Publications include Robert Browning's Romantic Irony in theRing and the Book,” as well as articles on Browning and Webster. She currently holds a SSHRC Standard Research grant to complete a book-length study of Augusta Webster.

Susan Shaw Sailer is Emerita Professor of English at West Virginia University. A Joyce and Irish Studies scholar, she is now writing poetry and studying piano. Several of her poems will be published in 2004.

Michael Tomko is a doctoral candidate at the University of Notre Dame and a Dissertation Fellow at the Erasmus Institute for 2004–2005. His dissertation focuses on the role of the Catholic Question in British Romantic literature.

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