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  • Contributors

Denise Albanese, Associate Professor of English and Cultural Studies at George Mason University, is the author of New Science, New World (1996) as well as essays on early modern mathematics and Shakespeare in peri-millennial public culture.

Michael Anderegg, Professor of English at the University of North Dakota, is the author of Orson Welles, Shakespeare, and Popular Culture (1999) and of the forthcoming Cinematic Shakespeare.

Roberta Barker, Assistant Professor of Theatre at Dalhousie University, is the author of a number of forthcoming articles on Ford, Middleton, and Stoppard in performance.

Jonathan Baldo, Chair of the Humanities Department and Associate Professor of English at the Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, is the author of The Unmasking of Drama: Contested Representation in Shakespeare's Tragedies (1996). His most recent articles address issues of nationhood and social memory in Shakespeare, and he is currently working on a book on that subject.

Bruce Boehrer is Bertram H. Davis Professor of Renaissance literature at Florida State University and founding editor of the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies. His latest book, Parrot Culture, is forthcoming from the University of Pennsylvania Press in 2004.

Mark Thornton Burnett, Reader in English at Queen's University, Belfast, is the author of Masters and Servants in English Renaissance Drama and Culture: Authority and Obedience (1997) and Constructing 'Monsters in Shakespearean Drama and Early Modern Culture (2002); the editor of Christopher Marlowe: The Complete Plays (1999) and Christopher Marlowe: The Complete Poems (2000); and the coeditor of New Essays on 'Hamlet’ (1994), Shakespeare and Ireland: History, Politics, Culture (1997), and Shakespeare, Film, Fin de Siècle (2000).

Susan Carlson is an Associate Provost and Professor of English at Iowa State University. Her most recent research has focused on the connections between early-twentieth-century performance of Shakespeare and English suffrage theater. [End Page 352]

Thomas Cartelli, Neh Professor of Humanities at Muhlenberg College, is the author, most recently, of Repositioning Shakespeare: National Formations, Postcolonial Appropriations (1999) and of Marlowe, Shakespeare, and the Economy of Theatrical Experience (1991).

Frank Nicholas Clary, Professor of English at Saint Michael's College, Vermont, is a member of the New Variorum Hamlet editorial team and is also researching the 1965-66 Royal Shakespeare Company production of Hamlet directed by Sir Peter Hall.

Hugh Craig directs the Centre for Literary and Linguistic Computing at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.

Lloyd Davis teaches medieval and early modern literature and drama at the University of Queensland, Australia.

Frances E. Dolan is Professor of English at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of Whores of Babylon: Gender, Catholicism, and Seventeenth-Century Print Culture (1999) and Dangerous Familiars: Representations of Domestic Crime in England, 1550-1700 (1994).

Heather Dubrow, Tighe-Evans Professor and John Bascom Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is the author of five scholarly books, most recently Shakespeare and Domestic Loss: Forms of Deprivation, Mourning, and Recuperation (1999); her other publications include numerous articles on early modern literature and on pedagogy, two chapbooks of poetry, and a forthcoming edition of As You Like It for the New Riverside Shakespeare.

Darryl J. Gless, Professor of English at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and Senior Associate Dean for Fine Arts and Humanities, is the author of "Measure for Measure," the Law, and the Convent (1979) and Interpretation and Theology in Spenser (1994).

MacDonald P. Jackson, Professor of English at the University of Auckland, has recently published Defining Shakespeare: Pericles as Test Case (2003) and, with David Gunby and David Carnegie, Volume 2 of the Cambridge edition of the works of John Webster. [End Page 353]

Barbara Kreps is Associate Professor of English at the University of Pisa. Her essays on legal issues in the plays of Dekker, Jonson, and Shakespeare have appeared in ELH, The Ben Jonson Journal, and Shakespeare Survey.

Jennifer Lewin, Assistant Professor of English at the University of Kentucky is working on a study of sleep and dreams in the English Renaissance. She has published articles on Shakespeare, eighteenth-century poetry and the New Critics, and has articles forthcoming on John Milton and on Sir Thomas Browne.

Lawrence Manley, Professor of English at Yale...

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