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  • Notes on Contributors

dudlew andrew is professor of Comparative Literature and Co-Chair of the Film Studies Program at Yale, where he teaches and writes on French culture and World Cinema.

david bromwich is professor of English at Yale University and the author most recently of Skeptical Music: Essays on Modern Poetry (2001).

elizabeth butler cullingford is Jane and Rowland Blumberg Centennial Professor of English Literature and University Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of Yeats, Ireland and Fascism (1981), Gender and History in Yeats’s Love Poetry (1993), and Ireland’s Others: Gender and Ethnicity in Irish Literature and Popular Culture (2001).

luke gibbons, professor of English and Film, Television, and Theater, at the University of Notre Dame, is the author of Transformations in Irish Culture (1996), coauthor Cinema in Ireland (1988), and a contributing editor of The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing (1991). His most recent book, Edmund Burke and Ireland: Aesthetics, Politics and the Colonial Sublime will be published in 2002, as will his study of John Ford’s The Quiet Man. A collection of essays which he has co-edited, Re-Inventing Ireland: Culture, Politics and the Global Economy, is also due for publication in 2002.

marjorie howes is Associate Professor in English and Irish Studies at Boston College. She is the author of Yeats’s Nations: Gender, Class, and Irishness (1996), and co-editor of Semicolonial Joyce (2000).

j’aime morrison is an Assistant Professor of Theater and Dance at California State University, Northridge and a doctoral candidate in the Department of Performance Studies at New York University. Ms. Morrison, a graduate of University College Dublin, has held dance residencies at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre for Artists, The Foyle Arts Centre and The Arts Council of Northern Ireland.

paul muldoon’s most recent book is Poems 1968–98 (2001). He is Howard G. B. Clark Professor in the Humanities at Princeton University and Professor of Poetry at Oxford. [End Page 221]

joseph roach, Charles C. and Dorathea S. Dilley Professor of Theater at Yale, has chaired the Department of Performance Studies in the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU, the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Theater at Northwestern University, and the Performing Arts Department at Washington University in St. Louis. He is author of Cities of the Dead: Circum-Atlantic Performance (1996).

bonnie roos is completing a dissertation on European Modernist literature and art in the University of Oregon Comparative Literature Program. She has published articles in Comparative Literature Studies, Aurora, The Journal of the History of Art and Research in African Literatures (forthcoming).

kevin whelan is Michael J. Smurfit Director of the Keough-Notre Dame Centre in Dublin. Among his books are The Tree of Liberty: Radicalism, Catholicism and the Construction of Irish Identity 1760–1830 (1996) and Fellowship of Freedom: The United Irishmen and 1798 (1998). [End Page 222]

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