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  • The Contributors

Shari Goldberg is Assistant Professor of Literary Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas. Her current project engages discourses of politics, philosophy, race, and law by studying the relationship between silence and testimony in 17th–19th-century American Literature.

Mark Rifkin is Assistant Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where he teaches Native American literature, 19th-century U.S. Literature, and queer studies. He is author of Manifesting America and When Did Indians Become Straight?

Matthew Stratton is Assistant Professor of English at the University of California, Davis. He is completing a book manuscript on the aesthetic politics of irony in 20th-century American literature and culture.

Tom Fisher is Assistant Professor of English at Portland State University. He currently is working on two manuscripts: one on not writing and modernism; one on songs, selves and sorceries.

Geoff Hamilton is an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, Mississauga. His current research focuses on representations of psychopathy in contemporary American culture.

Hikaru Fujii is Assistant Professor of English at Doshisha University, Japan. He has published on contemporary American writers, including Paul Auster, Steve Erickson, and Paul Theroux; his current research involves the motif of the double in contemporary fiction. [End Page 137]

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