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  • Contributors

Michael J. Zogry is an associate professor in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Kansas and holds a courtesy appointment in the Global Indigenous Nations Studies Program. He is the author of Anetso, the Cherokee Ball Game: At the Center of Ceremony and Identity (University of North Carolina Press, 2010), a volume in the series First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies, a collaborative project among four academic presses funded by a grant from the Mellon Foundation.

Penelope Kelsey is associate professor of English and ethnic studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her book Tribal Theory in Native American Literature was published by the University of Nebraska Press in 2009. Her forthcoming edited collection on Maurice Kenny's poetry and fiction, Strawberries in Brooklyn, will be published by SUNY Press. Her work in progress, Building a Longhouse, examines Haudenosaunee literature, visual culture, and intellectual history.

Cari M. Carpenter is an associate professor in the English Department at West Virginia University, where she is also a member of the Native American Studies Program and an affiliate of the Center for Women's Studies. In 2008 she published the book Seeing Red: Anger, Sentimentality, and American Indians (Ohio State University Press). She has published articles on early American Indian women writers and feminist pedagogy. In 2010 she published the book Selected Writings of Victoria Woodhull: Suffrage, Free Love, and Eugenics (University of Nebraska Press). She earned her PhD in English and women's studies from the University of Michigan in 2002.

Lisa King earned her PhD from the University of Kansas in 2008 in rhetoric and composition, with an emphasis in American Indian rhetorics. Her scholarship [End Page 157] focuses on contemporary American Indian rhetorics, especially in cross-cultural sites, as well as pedagogical practice with Indigenous texts. She is of Delaware and European American descent.

Daniel Morley Johnson is a PhD candidate in the Comparative Literature Program and a part-time instructor in the Faculty of Native Studies at the University of Alberta. His scholarly work has recently appeared in Troubling Tricksters: Revisioning Critical Conversations (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2010). A graduate of the Aboriginal Studies Program at the University of Toronto, Johnson now lives in Edmonton, home of the Canadian Football League's Edmonton Eskimos. [End Page 158]

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