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  • Notes on Contributors

Emily Holman is a doctoral candidate at Exeter College, Oxford. Her research focuses on the literary relationship between literature and moral knowledge, with particular emphasis on the way in which literary form creates conceptual content.

Steven Matthews is Professor of Modernism and Beckett Studies at Reading University. His books include Irish Poetry: Politics, History, Negotiation. The Evolving Debate, 1969 to the Present (Macmillan, 1997); Yeats as Precursor (Macmillan, 2000); and Les Murray (Manchester UP Contemporary World Writers Series, 2001). His T. S. Eliot and Early Modern Literature appeared from OUP in April 2013. A volume of his poetry, Skying, appeared from Waterloo Press in 2012.

Sarah Meer teaches British and American Literature at the University of Cambridge. She is writing a book about transatlantic cultural enterprises in the nineteenth century.

Cal Revely-Calder works and writes in Cambridge. He co-edits the experimental poetry/prose magazine Charlatan Works, and is a contributing editor at the Cambridge Humanities Review.

Gabriel Roberts read English as an undergraduate and MA student at Christ’s College, Cambridge. He then spent a year at Harvard before reading for a DPhil at Worcester College, Oxford.

Peter Robinson is Professor of English and American Literature at the University of Reading. Among his recent publications is The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary British and Irish Poetry (2013), which he edited. A collection of poems, Buried Music, and The Draft Will, a volume of prose poetry and memoir, appeared in 2015. His novel September in the Rain is due in 2016.

Laura Seymour’s PhD thesis (Birkbeck 2015) was on cognitive theory and Shakespeare’s plays. A chapter on cognition and Julius Caesar is forthcoming in Languages, Bodies and Ecologies edited by Amy Cook and Rhonda Blair (Methuen).

Claire Wilkinson is a PhD student in the Faculty of English at the University of Cambridge. She works on the relationship between literature and financial crisis.

Elias Wynshaw has just completed his BA in English Literature at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He specialised in the visual arts and Dante. He currently works as a tour guide and aspires to be a filmmaker. [End Page 1]

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