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  • The Contributors

Hadley Leach received her Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. She works for Project MUSE at The Johns Hopkins University Press.

Janet Gray teaches Women's and Gender Studies and Peace Studies at The College of New Jersey. She is author of Race and Time: American Women's Poetics from Antislavery to Racial Modernity (2004) and editor of She Wields a Pen: American Women Poets of the 19th Century (1997).

Tiffany Aldrich MacBain is Associate Professor of English at the University of Puget Sound. The present essay is the first in a series on nineteenth-century American texts that materialize the symbolic to subvert rather than uphold cultural conventions of representation.

Christopher Schmidt is Assistant Professor of English at LaGuardia Community College, CUNY. He is author of a book of poems, The Next in Line, and his writing has appeared in Tin House, Book-forum, Boston Review, SubStance, Time magazine, and others. He is completing a study on waste and twentieth-century aesthetics.

Arielle Zibrak is a Ph.D. candidate at Boston University who works primarily in the field of nineteenth-century Anglo-American literature and culture. She is completing her dissertation, "Art & Anti-Identity."

Tiffany Eberle Kriner is Associate Professor of English at Wheaton College (IL). Her articles have appeared in Christianity & Literature and Literature and Belief. She is currently writing a book-length eschatology of reading.

Marta Caminero-Santangelo is Professor of English at the University of Kansas. She is the author of On Latinidad: U.S. Latino Literature and the Construction of Ethnicity and The Madwoman Can't Speak: Or Why Insanity Is Not Subversive. [End Page 177]

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