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Contributors • MICHAEL J. SIDNELL is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Toronto and Academic Secretary of the Graduate Centre for Study of Drama. He has published numerous articles on Yeats, Synge, and others, is co-author of Druid Craft: The Writing of The Shadowy Waters (1971), and is currently writing a book on Yeats. KURT TETZELIV. ROSADOR: Dr. Tetzeli v. Rosador teaches English Literature at the University of Bonn. He has published a book on Magic in Elizabethan Drama and various articles on Marlowe, Victorian melodrama, Dickens, Shaw and Pinter. He has just fInished a book on The English History Play Since Shaw. BRENDA MURPHY is a graduate student at Brown University specializing in American and Irish literature. She also teaches an introductory drama course. SUSAN R. GORSKY is an Associate Professor of English at the Cleveland State University, and has contributed articles on the experimental fiction of Virginia Woolf, literary convention in nineteenth century fiction, and the roles and characterization of women in literature to such journals as Modern Fiction Studies and Journal ofPopular Culture. She is currently writing a book on Virginia Woolf. LOUISA JONES teaches French and Comparative Literature at the University of Washington. She is currently preparing a book on the Pierrot figure in nineteenth century France, and also has a special interest in genre problems. GEORGE MARTIN: Dr. Martin received advanced degrees in French from Laval University and Tulane University. He has taught at both Tulane and Louisiana State University in New Orleans and now lives in New York. E. G. BIERHAUS, JR.: Professor Bierhaus teaches English and Drama at Warren Wilson College, Swannoanoa, North Carolina. ROBERT L. TENER is Associate Professor of English at Kent State University. He has published articles on LeRoi Jones and Harold Pinter in addition to a study of Homer's Odyssey. RENATE USMIANI teaches drama and world literature at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax. She has contributed to essay collections in Germany and Canada and published articles on various aspects of modern European drama and, most recently, radio drama. BETTINA L. KNAPP: Professor of Romance Languages at Hunter College, Dr. Knapp's books include Louis Jouvet: Man of the Theatre, Jean Genet, Jean Cocteau, and Antonin Artaud: Mythos and Renewal in Modern Drama. ...

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