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  • Contributors

Lisa Disch is associate professor of political science at the Universityof Minnesota - Twin Cities. LDISCH@POLISCI.UMN.EDU

Ann Lauterbach lives in New York City. She teaches at Bard College, where she is the David and Ruth Schwab III Professor of Language and Literature and co-directs the Writing Division of the MFA Program. The author of five collections of poetry, most recently On a Stair (Penguin,1998), she received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1993. Her email address is: annotate@aol.com

Nancy S. Love is Associate Professor of Political Science at Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of Marx, Nietzsche, and Modernity (Columbia, 2nd ed. 1996) and edited Dogmas and Dreams: Political Ideologies in the Moder n World . She is currently writing a book entitled The Music of Collective Action . Her email address is: mailto:nsl1@psu.edu

Kirstie M. McClure is Associate Professor of Political Science and the Humanities Center at The Johns Hopkins University. Her most recent book is Judging Rights: Lockean Politics and the Limits of Consent , published by Cornell University Press. Her email address is: kmmac@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu

Davide Panagia is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Theory at The Johns Hopkins University. He is currently working on a dissertation entitled “What is Political Thinking? The Place of Piety, Deliberation, and Innovation in Political Life” that examines contemporary representations of political thinking and the relationship these modes of thinking have toquestions of political agency and participation. Davide Panagia previously received a Masters degree from Magdalen College, Oxford where he attended as a Rhodes Scholar.

Stephen Schneck teaches politics at Catholic University. schneck@cua.edu

Michael J. Shapiro is the author of many books in contemporary political theory and international relations, including most recently, Violent Cartographies: Mapping Cultures of War (Minnesota, 1997). He is Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawaii.

Paul Winke is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at The Johns Hopkins University. winke@jhu.edu

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