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  • Notes on Contributors

Sam Cooper was recently awarded his DPhil by the University of Sussex. His research focuses on the English reception and legacy of the Situationist International, and his writing has appeared, or is soon to appear, in New Formations, World Picture and The Sixties.

Louise Curran is a Junior Research Fellow at Trinity College, Oxford, working on eighteenth-century letters and literary celebrity. She is also co-editing a volume of Samuel Richardson’s correspondence for Cambridge University Press.

David Gervais is an editor of the Cambridge Quarterly.

Michael D. Hurley is a University Lecturer in English and Fellow of St Catherine’s College Cambridge.

Raphael Lyne is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Murray Edwards College. He is the author of Shakespeare’s Late Work (2007) and Shakespeare, Rhetoric and Cognition (2011).

Clare Pettitt is Professor of Nineteenth-century English Literature at King’s College London. She has published Patent Inventions: Intellectual Property and the Victorian Novel (OUP, 2004) and ‘Dr Livingstone, I Presume?’: Missionaries, Journalists, Explorers and Empire (Harvard UP, 2007).

Thomas Peyser is the A. G. Ingram Professor of English at Randolph-Macon College, Virginia. He is the author of Utopia and Cosmopolis: Globalization in the Era of American Literary Realism.

Emily Vasiliauskas is a PhD candidate in English and Humanities at Princeton University, where she is writing a dissertation on ‘The Invention of the Literary Afterlife in England, 1598–1637’.

Oliver Wort is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow in English at the University of Cambridge. Prior to this he was an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures at Kyushu University, Japan. [End Page 98]

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