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  • Contributors

Kelly Mcguire is a doctoral candidate at the University of Western Ontario.

Claire Grogan, professor of English at Bishop’s University, is working on a book entitled Uncovering the Feminist Politics of Elizabeth Hamilton (1756–1816).

Sara Salih, assistant professor in English at the University of Toronto, is currently working on a book about representations of “brown” women in Jamaica and England from the Abolition era to the present day.

Morgan Rooney is a doctoral candidate at the University of Ottawa. His research interests include Edmund Burke, the Revolution Controversy, and late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century novels.

Joel Peter Eigen is Charles A. Dana Professor of Sociology at Franklin and Marshall College and author of Unconscious Crime: Mental Absence and Criminal Responsibility in Victorian London (2003).

Andrew O’Malley, associate professor in the English Department at the University of Winnipeg, is the author of The Making of the Modern Child: Children’s Literature and Childhood in the Late Eighteenth Century (2003).

Valeria Sobol, assistant professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is a specialist in late eighteenth and nineteenth-century Russian literature.

Anne Coudreuse, auteur du Goût des larmes au XVIIIe siècle (1999) et du Refus du pathos au XVIIIe siècle (2001), est maître de conférences à l’Université de Paris 13.

Elizabethjane Wall Hinds is professor and chair of the English Department at SUNY Brockport; she is author of Private Property: Charles Brockden Brown’s Gendered Economics of Virtue (1997) and editor of The Multiple Worlds of Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon: Eighteenth-Century Contexts, Postmodern Observations (2005).

Pierre Berthiaume, Docteur d’État (France), est professeur au département des lettres françaises de l’Université d’Ottawa.

John A. Dussinger, professor emeritus of the English Department at the University of Illinois, is currently editing vols. 3 and 4 of The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Samuel Richardson.

Amy J. Pawl, senior lecturer in English at Washington University in St. Louis, has published articles on Frances Burney, Charlotte Lennox, and Jane Austen.

Monique Moser-Verrey est professeure titulaire et directrice du Département de littératures et de langues modernes à l’Université de Montréal, et un membre du groupe de recherche Lumières allemandes et européennes au CCEAE (Centre canadien d’études allemandes et européennes).

Helen Thompson, assistant professor of English at Northwestern University, is the author of Ingenuous Subjection: Compliance and Power in the Eighteenth-Century Domestic Novel (2005).

Isabelle Billaud, étudiante en études littéraires à l’Université du Québec à Montréal, prépare une thése de doctorat sur la représentation du personnage travesti dans les textes du XVIIe siècle à partir de l’examen de traités médicaux, juridiques et moraux du temps.

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