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South Central Review 23.1 (2006) 127-128



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Notes on Contributors

Marian Eide is an Associate Professor of English at Texas A&M University. She is the author of Ethical Joyce (Cambridge 2002).
Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is the author of Fascist Spectacle: The Aesthetics of Power in Mussolini's Italy (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997). She is currently writing a book on the Collège de Sociologie that examines the relationship between the sacred and politics.
Emmanuel Faye is Associate Professor of Philosophy (Maitre de conferences) at the University of Paris X-Nanterre. He is the author of Philosophie et la Perfection de l'homme: de la Renaissance à Descartes (Paris, 1998) and, most recently Heidegger: L'introduction du nazisme dans la philosophie (Paris, 2005)
Claudio Fogu is the author of a monograph on the fascist vision of history entitled The Historic Imaginary. Politics of History in Fascist Italy, published in 2003 by the University of Toronto Press, and a co-editor of the collective volume The Politics of Memory in Postwar Europe forthcoming with Duke University Press (2006). He is an Assistant Professor in the French and Italian Studies department at the University of California Santa Barbara, and working on an intellectual history of Italian style.
Richard J. Golsan is a professor of French and the head of the Department of European and Classical Languages and Cultures at Texas A&M University. He is the editor of the South Central Review and author of René Girard and Myth: An Introduction (Routledge, 1993, 2001) and Vichy's Afterlife: History and Counterhistory in Postwar France (University of Nebraska Press, 2000).
Nitzan Lebovic is a lecturer at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). His dissertation is about the "Politicization of Lebensphilosophie" (Summer, 2005). He is currently doing research about the German-Jewish philosopher Hugo Bergmann, and writing about biosemiotics and biopolitics as well as about alternative psychology in Germany during the 1920s. His recent publications include: "Simmel's Edge: Georg Simmel between Counter History and History of Life," in: Ef-facing Simmel: Collected Articles (Forthcoming: Cambridge Press); "Dionysische Politik und der Rausch-Diskurs: Entwicklungen und Widersprüche zwischen Romantik und Lebensphilosophie," in Arpad von Klimo and Malte Rolf, eds., Rausch und Diktatur, (Forthcoming: Frankfurt and New York: Campus-Verlag, 2006); and "Alain Resnais' Nuit et Brouillard in the Israeli Mind: The Reception Of Holocaust Images" in: Ewout van der Knaap (ed.), Regaining Memory. Picturing the Holocaust with Night and Fog (London, Wallflower Press, 2005). [End Page 127]
Anne Morey is an assistant professor of English and Performance Studies at Texas A&M University. Her book, Hollywood Outsiders: The Adaptation of the Film Industry, 1913–1934, was published by University of Minnesota Press in 2003.
Patricia Phillippy is Professor of English at Texas A&M University. She has published a number of books and articles on early modern English and Comparative literature and culture, and women's studies.  Her most recent book is Painting Women:  Cosmetics, Canvasses and Early Modern Culture (Johns Hopkins UP, 2005).
Ben P. Robertson is Assistant Professor of English at Troy University in Troy, Alabama. His research interests include women's fiction of the British Romantic period, Romantic Poetry and drama, and trans-Atlantic literature. He is working on a poetry series on urban wildlife in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and on two academic books: an edited collection, Conflict in Southern Writing, and a book-length examination of the Romantic moral romance in the fictions of Elizabeth Inchbald and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Victoria Rosner is Associate Professor and Associate Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of English at Texas A&M University. Her book, Modernism and the Architecture of Private Life, was published by Columbia University Press in 2005.
Henry Rousso is the former Director of the Institute for Contemporary History in Paris (IHTP) and Professor of History at the University of Paris-X-Nanterre. The world's leading authority on the memory of the Vichy Regime, Rousso is the author of numerous books on the topic...

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