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  • Contributors

Bill Agee began in publishing before starting his own Photography/Fine Art/Graphic Design business. He has recently become fascinated by the blending of digital tools with more traditional media, and currently teaches courses in digitial imaging. http://redsilver.com

Michael J. Baxter is a member of the Department of Theology at the University of Notre Dame and also national secretary of the Catholic Peace Fellowship, which provides support to conscientious objectors to war. Baxter.6@nd.edu

Dan Burkholder is recognized as one of contemporary photography's pioneers. Dan has taught at the International Center of Photography (New York), The Museum of Photographic Arts (San Diego), The School of the Chicago Art Institute, The Royal Photographic Society (Madrid, Spain), and with many other organizations. www.danburkholder.com

Scott Cairns is Professor of English at University of Missouri, Columbia. He is the author of several works of poetry, most recently PhiloKalia: New and Selected Poems (Zoo Press, 2002). His work has appeared in such journals as Prairie Schooner, Sojourners, Image, The Paris Review and America. CairnsS@missouri.edu

Lawrence S. Cunningham is John A. O'Brien Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of numerous articles and books on Christian Spirituality, including Thomas Merton and the Monastic Tradition (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999) and (with Keith Egan), Christian Spirituality: Themes from the Tradition (New York: Paulist 1996). He is currently working on a book, A Short History of the Saints, for Blackwell. cunningham.l@nd.edu

Miguel Diáz is Associate Professor in the Department of Theology and Philosophy at Barry University. He is co-editor of From the Heart of Our People: Latino/a Explorations in Systematic Theology (Orbis, 1999), author of On Being Human: U.S. Hispanic and Rahnerian Perspectives (Orbis, 2001), which was the winner of the Hispanic Theological Initiative's 2002 Book Prize. mdiaz@mail.barry.edu

Keith J. Egan holds the Aquinas Chair in Catholic Theology at Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, Indiana, where he founded its Center for Spirituality. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame and the editor of Carmelite Prayer: A Tradition for the Twenty-first Century (Paulist Press, 2003). kegan@saintmarys.edu

Jeannine Hill Fletcher is an Assistant Professor of Theology at Fordham University, Bronx, NY. She has published articles on Karl Rahner and religious pluralism, and is currently working on a manuscript envisioning a feminist theology of religious pluralism (Forthcoming, Continuum). hillfletche@fordham.edu

Rev. James Fredericks is a Professor of Theology at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, and a specialist in Buddhist-Christian dialogue. He has worked as a Fulbright scholar in Kyoto, Japan, and is a member of the Los Angeles Buddhist-Catholic Dialogue Group. His next book, A New Solidarity: Doing Theology in Dialogue with Buddhism will be published by Orbis Books. JFrederi@lmu.edu

E. Glenn Hinson is Professor of Spirituality and John Loftis Professor of Church History Emeritus at Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond, Virginia. In retirement since 1999, he has taught at Candler and McAfee Schools of Theology in Atlanta, Lexington Theological Seminary, Louisville Presbyterian Seminary, and a newly founded Baptist Seminary of Kentucky. RE2Hinson@aol.com

Darrin James is the husband part of a husband/wife photographic team from Australia, now living in London. Their work seeks to capture the essence of cultures, whether in their own back yard or in far away exotic countries including Myanmar (Burma), Laos, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Nepal, Indonesia, Morocco, and, of course, Australia. www.djphotography.net

Irwin Klein's work has appeared in a number of publications, including Modern Photography, Popular Photography, Aperture, and Peter Galassi's American Photography, 1890–1965, From the Museum of Modern Art. Both the Eastman House and the Museum of Modern Art have some of his prints in their permanent collections. In 1979 his Minnesota Fire photograph appeared in the Time-Life Books Photography Year. To view further works, please see www.wholeo.net or http://homepage.mac.com/pardass/IRWINKLEIN/INDEX.html

Robert Manganelli is a graduate of the Rochester Institute of Technology's School of Photographic Arts and Sciences as well as a graduate of UCLA...

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