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Contributors • ROBERT B. BENNETT is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Delaware . His articles include a study of Jaques in As You Like It, Shakespeare Studies, Volume Nine, and forthcoming articles on the Towneley Abraham in ModernLanguage Studies, John Webster in English Literary Renaissance, and Hamlet in Archivfur das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen. BRIAN M. CROSSLEY is a Lecturer in the Department of English at Napier College, Edinburgh. He has produced many plays, and on the 700th anniversary of Becket's death, produced T.S. Eliot's Murder In The Cathedral in Norwich Cathedral . A free-Ianc~ drama critic ~ho publish~s widely, he ha~ recently been awarded a fellowship by the Institute of Umted States Studies of London University. LUCINA P. GABBARD is an Associate Professor of English at Eastern Illinois University . She is the author of The Dream Structure ofPinter's Plays: A Psychoanalytic Approach, scheduled to be released this winter by Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. WALTER LAZENBY teaches courses in dramatic literature at Eastern Illinois University , where he is Professor of English. In addition to theatre and book reviews , he has published articles in Quarterly Journal of Speech, a monograph on Paul Green, and a book on Arthur Wing Pinero. LEONARD POWLICK, an Assistant Professor of English at Wilkes College, specializes in the drama, and, in particular, the mooern drama. He has prevIOusly published articles on the staging of medieval drama, Shakespeare and Pinter, and delivered papers on Pinter and Buechner. He is currently at work ona full-length study of Pinter. JANES R. SCRIMGEOUR is Assistant Professor of English at Illinois State University. He wrote his dissertation on despair in EngIish and American Drama, and has published articles in Scandinavian Studies and Massachusetts Studies in Eng[ish, a number of reviews and columns on contemporary poetry, and over thirty poems in various little magazines. His recently completed Twayne book on Sean O'Casey should appear m the near future. ELLIOTT M. SIMON is currently a visiting professor teaching English literature at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, on a leave of absence from the University .of Haifa, Israel. He has recently finished an extensive historical and interpretive study of the development of popular Edwardian problemplays . ...

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