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CONTRIBUTORS Victor Carrabino, a Professor of French at the Florida State University where he is also the Associate Chair for Graduate Affairs, was born in Italy. He has written extensively on the French Nouveau Roman and Phenomenology, and on Comparative Literature. A specialist of Black Literature of French Expression, he has authored articles on Hamidou Kane, Cheikh Badiane, Rabemanajara, as well as on the Négritude movement in general. Nora Glickman was born in La Pampa, Argentina. She is a Professor of Spanish at Queens College C.U.N.Y. In 1983 she published Uno desús Juanes (Buenos Aires, Ed. de la Flor), a collection of short stories. Her nonfiction publications include La trata de Blancas (Buenos Aires, Ed. Pardes, 1984), and articles in the areas of Latin American contemporary drama, feminism, and Jewish identity. She is presently preparing a second book of short stories to be published in Buenos Aires next year. Craig Kallendorf is an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University, where he teaches history of rhetoric, comparative literature, composition, Latin, and Greek. Carol Kallendorf owns Kallendorf Communication Services, a firm which provides writing services and communications training to corporations, political campaigns, and trade and professional associations. She is also Director of Communications for the Texas A&M University System. Sally L. Kitch is an Assistant Professor of women's studies at Wichita State University and a co-founder of that program. Her research interests center on the study of gender as a symbolic system in culture and, as a reflection of the language/culture system of a particular society, in literature. She teaches courses in feminist theory, women and culture, myths and realities of motherhood, and interdisciplinary research methodology. Judith Moore is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Alaska, Anchorage, and has taught at Fisk University and the State University College at Oswego, New York. She has published and presented papers on eighteenth-century English literature and English women writers and has recently finished Publicity and Collision: Conflicts in ProfessionalNursing in Victorian England, a historical study of British nursing sisterhoods in the late nineteenth century. She has also published fiction and is currently at work on a study of how English women novelists have appropriated the work of their male predecessors. Colette H. Winn is an Assistant Professor of French at Washington University at St. Louis. Her book on Jean de Sponde: Les Sonnets de la Mort ou la poétique de l'accoutumance was released in 1984 by Scripta Humanística. She has also published in various journals and presented papers on Paul Eluard, Marguerite de Navarre, Helisenne de Crenne, Bonaventure Des Periers. She is currently working on a book on L 'Esthétique du jeu dans L 'Heptameron. ...

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