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Contributors Carol Colatrella is Associate Professor of Literature and Cultural Studies in the School of Literature, Communication, and Culture and Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Women, Science, and Technology at Georgia Tech. Her book Evolution , Sacrifice, and Narrative: Balzac, Zola, and Faulkner and articles in NineteenthCentury French Studies and Comparative Literature and other journals analyze popular and scientific narrative representations of race, class, and gender. Since 1993, she has served as Executive Director of the Society for Literature and Science. Rebecca Sullivan is an assistant professor at the University of Calgary, Faculty of Communication and Culture. Her areas of interest are gender and popular culture, religion and the mass media, and cultural studies of science and biotechnology. Anne-Marie Kinahan is a candidate in the PhD Program in Communication at Carleton University. Her research interests include communication and the public sphere; the history of the women’s movement in Canada and feminism and popular culture. Helen Yeates teaches and researches in film, media, and feminist studies in the Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Her recent and forthcoming publications involve studies of ageing masculinities in popular culture; The Sopranos television series; youth identities and blockbuster films; and drugs, sport, and the media. Linda Tucker recently completed her PhD at the University of Alberta. Her dissertation was entitled “Lockstep and Dance: Containment and Resistance in Black Men’s Lives and Representations of Them.” Nina Reid-Maroney teaches American History and Women’s Studies at the University of Windsor and is the author of Philadelphia's Enlightenment, 1740–1800: Kingdom of Christ, Empire of Reason (Greenwood Press, 2000). ...

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