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  • Contributors

Gilly Carr lectures in archaeology at the University of Cambridge's Institute of Continuing Education; she is also a Fellow at St. Catharine's College. She is currently engaged in three research projects on the German-occupied Channel Islands and is writing books on various aspects of the legacy and heritage of this period. (gcc20@hermes.cam.ac.uk)

Andrew Demshuk is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of The Lost German East: Forced Migration and the Politics of Memory, 1945-1970 (Cambridge University Press, 2012). His current research explores facets of memory among expellees in postwar Germany, with growing attention to Silesians who settled in the Soviet Zone of occupation. (demshuk@uab.edu)

Géraldine Enjelvin is a Senior Lecturer in French at the University of Northampton (UK) as well as one of its Fellows in Learning and Teaching. Since 2001, she has published several articles, in both French and English, on the (de/re)construction of French identity, the (de/re) construction of French (un)official history (especially that of the Harkis) and the teaching of French to non-sighted students. (Geraldine.Enjelvin@northampton.ac.uk)

Nada Korac-Kakabadse is Professor in Management and Business Research at the University of Northampton, Business School. She has co-authored twenty-one books (with Andrew Kakabadse) and has published over 150 scholarly articles. Her current areas of interest focus on leadership, boardroom effectiveness, governance, CSR and ethics, diversity and ICT impact on individuals and society. (Nada.Korac-Kakabadse@northampton.ac.uk)

Malika Rahal is a historian at the IHTP (Institut d'histoire du temps présent, CNRS, Paris). She has explored the colonial history of Algeria, [End Page 178] and has recently publisher a biography, Ali Boumendjel: Une affaire française, une histoire algérienne (Paris: Belles Lettres, 2010). She is currently engaged in research on the post-independence history of Algeria. (malika.rahal@ihtp.cnrs.fr)

Bradford Vivian is Associate Professor of Communication and Rhetorical Studies at Syracuse University. He is the author of Public Forgetting: The Rhetoric and Politics of Beginning Again (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2010) and Being Made Strange: Rhetoric beyond Representation (SUNY Press, 2004) as well as co-editor, with Anne T. Demo, of Rhetoric, Representation, and Visual Form: Sighting Memory (Routledge, 2011). (bjvivian@syr.edu) [End Page 179]

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