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  • Contributors

Molly Farneth is a doctoral student in the religion department at Princeton University, with research interests in modern Western religious thought, religious ethics, ritual studies, and feminist and gender studies in religion. Her current project focuses on ethical conflict and religious practices in G. W. F. Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit.

Frank Gunderson is associate professor of ethnomusicology at Florida State University. His most recent book, “We Never Sleep We Dream of Farming”: Sukuma Labor Songs from Western Tanzania (Brill Academic Press, 2010) won the 2009–11 Kwabena Nketia Book Award for best monograph on African music.

David A. Hoekema is professor in and chair of the philosophy department at Calvin College, Grand Rapids. He previously was executive director of the American Philosophical Association, program director of Calvin’s Semester in Ghana, a Fulbright scholar in Kenya, and president of the Society for Values in Higher Education.

Stephen Rowe is professor of philosophy, liberal studies, and religious studies at Grand Valley State University. He is active in intercultural dialogue through Chinese and American institutions. His books include Rediscovering the West: An Inquiry into Nothingness and Relatedness and Overcoming America/America Overcoming: Can We Survive Modernity?

Michael Strawser is assistant department chair and associate professor of philosophy at the University of Central Florida, Orlando. His research interests include the philosophy of love, Spinoza, Kierkegaard, and ethics. He is author of Both/And: Reading Kierkegaard from Irony to Edification and is senior editor of Florida Philosophical Review. [End Page 1]

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