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  • Notes on Contributors

Nan Alamilla Boyd is chair and associate professor of women's studies at San Francisco State University. Her current research explores the history of tourism and the commodification of race and sex in San Francisco's globalizing economy. She received a BA in history from the University of California, Berkeley and an MA and PhD from the Department of American Civilization at Brown University.

Jean-Louis Guereña is professor of Spanish history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the Department of Spanish History of the University François Rabelais of Tours, France. He has published and edited numerous books on the cultural and social history of Spain in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Antje Kampf is an associate professor (Juniorprofessor) of the history, philosophy, and ethics of medicine at the Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany. She is the author of Mapping Out the Venereal Wilderness: STD and Public Health in New Zealand, 1920-1980 (LIT-Verlag, 2007), and has published on the history of public health, race, and gender. Her current research focuses on the history of male reproduction in nineteenth-and twentieth-century Germany.

Anna Kłosowska is associate professor in the Department of French and Italian, Miami University. She edited Madeleine de l'Aubespine's Selected Poems and Translations (University of Chicago Press, 2007). She is the author of Queer Love in the Middle Ages (Palgrave, 2005), editor of Violence against Women in Medieval Texts (University Press of Florida, 1997), and numerous articles on queer studies, including recently in the Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender, ed. Fedwa Malti-Douglas (Macmillan, 2007).

Carrie Pitzulo is a doctoral candidate in American history at the City University of New York Graduate Center. Her research is on post-World War II gender, sexuality, and popular culture. Her dissertation is entitled "Bachelors and Bunnies: Playboy Magazine and Modern Heterosexuality, 1953-1973."

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