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  • Contributors

Tim Cole is Professor of Social History at the University of Bristol. He is the author of Images of the Holocaust: The Myth of the "Shoah Business"/Selling the Holocaust: From Auschwitz to Schindler. How History Is Bought, Packaged and Sold (Duckworth/Routledge, 1999); Holocaust City: The Making of a Jewish Ghetto (Routledge, 2003); and Traces of the Holocaust: Journeying In and Out of the Ghettos (Continuum, 2011). He is currently completing a book on Holocaust Landscapes. (Tim.Cole@bristol.ac.uk)

Peter Donaldson is a Lecturer in Modern British History at the University of Kent. His research focuses on war and memory and he has recently completed a monograph on commemoration and the memory of the South African War (1899-1902). (P.Donaldson@kent.ac.uk)

Marta Duch-Dyngosz is a PhD student at the Institute of Sociology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków. Her research concerns the commemoration of prewar Jewish communities in present-day Poland as an expression of the cultural trauma of the Holocaust. (marta.duch@uj.edu.pl)

Marek Kucia is Associate Professor at the Institute of Sociology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków and a lecturer at the Center for European Studies there. His books include Auschwitz jako fakt spoleczny (Auschwitz as a social fact) (Kraków: Universitas, 2005) and Polacy wobec Auschwitz i Żydów (Poles regarding Auschwitz and Jews) (forthcoming). His current research concerns the Europeanization of Holocaust memory in eastern Europe. He is a founding member and member of the board of the European Association for Holocaust Studies. (marek.kucia@uj.edu.pl)

Mateusz Magierowski is a PhD student at the Institute of Sociology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków. His research concerns the remembering [End Page 174] and forgetting of mass crimes committed by ethnic Poles against members of other ethnic groups. (mateusz.magierowski@uj.edu.pl)

Annebella Pollen is a Senior Lecturer in History of Art and Design at the University of Brighton, UK. Her research interests focus on popular visual and material culture, particularly in relation to the uses and expectations made of mass participation photography. She is currently writing a monograph on the topic of life-in-a-day photography projects, while developing new research into the role of art, design and dress in interwar progressive youth organizations. (a.pollen@brighton.ac.uk)

Lynn Struve is Professor Emerita of History and of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her area of research specialization is the political, intellectual, and cultural history of the sixteenth through eighteenth century in China. Her current monographic project, tentatively titled "The Dreaming Mind and the End of the Ming World," examines the interplay of memory, dream, and understandings of mind-asleep in writings from the late Ming and the Ming-Qing dynastic transition. (struve@indiana.edu) [End Page 175]

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