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  • Contributors

Crystal Parikh is an Assistant Professor of English and Ethnic Studies at the University of Utah. Her scholarship and teaching focus on Asian American and Latina/o literatures and culture. She has published in Contemporary Literature and Modem Fiction Studies and is currently completing a book manuscript, which examines the figure of the traitor and the theme of treason in Asian American and Latina/o literary and cultural narratives.

Nadine Naber is a Visiting Professor in Women’s Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she is conducting ethnographic research on Arab and Muslim Identity Formation in the Aftermath of September 11th in the San Francisco Bay Area, funded by the Russell Sage Foundation. She also is expanding into a book manuscript her dissertation on race, gender, and sexuality among Arab Americans. In Fall 2003, she will be an Assistant Professor of Arab American Studies and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Yong Chen is an Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Irvine, where he also serves as the University’s Associate Dean of Graduate Studies, responsible for academic issues and for administering and writing federal grants. He is the author of Chinese San Francisco 1850–1943: A Transpacific Community (Stanford, 2000). His research on diverse topics, such as Chinese American history, U.S. ethnic food, and higher education, has been published in various leading academic journals in the United States and China. [End Page 299]

Dorothy Wang is an assistant professor in the Department of English and a core faculty member in the Asian American Studies program at Northwestern University.

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