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Noteson Contributors 127 Notes on Contributors Graham Adams, Jr. is Professor of History and Chairman of the American Studies Program at Mount Alison University. Author of Age of Industrial Violence,1910-1915, he has contributed to several publications including American Historical Review, Labor History, Journal of Canadian History, UrbanHistory Review, and the Dictionary of American Biography. His essay on frontier violence and the American mind appeared in the Review (VII/ I). Peter J. Bowler teaches the History and Philosophy of Science at The Queen's University of Belfast. He obtained the Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in 1971 and is the author of Fossils and Progress: Paleontology andthe Idea of Progressive Evolution in the Nineteenth Centwy (1976) as wellas several articles on the history of evolution theory. Peter Buitenhuis is Professor of English and Chairman of the Department at Simon Fraser University. His work on Henry James is familiar to readers of the Review. Among his recent publications are essays in The Canadian Imagination: Dimensions of a Literary Culture, ed. David Staines ( 1977) and The Stoic Strain in American Literature: Essays in Honour of Marston LaFrance, ed. Duane J. MacMillan ( 1979). H. David Brumble III is an Associate Professor of English and Director of the Composition Program at the University of Pittsburgh. He has published articles on Medieval and Renaissance allegory and iconography in suchjournals as Critical Quarter{v and Art Quarterly. His Annotated Bibliography of American Indian Autobiographies is forthcoming. J. M. Bumsted is Professor of History at Simon Fraser University. He 1s co-author of What Must I Do to be Saved? The Great Awakening in Coloma! America (1976 ). Barry K. Grant is an Assistant Professor of Film and Popular Culture in the Department of Drama and Film Studies at Brock University. He is the editor of the anthology, Film Genre: Theory and Criticism ( 1977), and he has published essays on science fiction in Paunch and on the styles and politics of Walt Whitman and Sergei Eisenstein in Literature IFilm Quarter(r. In Paunch he has an essay on genre and contextualism forthcommg , as well as one on popular music and auteur criticism in Sphinx. He 1s at work on a book on teaching film and television in the public school, as well as essays on perception in the Leatherstocking Tales, John Barth's metafiction, the films of George Romero, and rock music in the movies. David Ketterer is Professor of English at Concordia University. Aside from 128 Notes on Contributors numerous essays and reviews, he 1s the author of New Worlds for Old: The Apoca {yptic Imagination, Science Fiction, and American Literature (1974), The Rationale of Deception in Poe ( 1979), and Frankenstein's Creation: The Book, the Monster, and Human Reality (1979). Currentlv he is editing a collection entitled The "Science Fiction" of Mark Twain. ยท 0. S. Mitchell is an Associate Professor of English and Cultural Studies at Trent University. He has an essay forthcoming in Blake Studies. He 1s at work on a book on W. 0. Mitchell which studies his fiction, stage plays, radio drama and creative writing workshop techniques. "' Gilman M. Ostrander is Professor of History at the University of Waterloo. His most recent book is Arnerican Civilization in the Machine Age (1970). His most recent essay appeared in William and Mary Quarterly. He contributed a review essay to our Spring 1979 number. He is currently writing a book entitled Republic of Letters: The American Intellectual Community, 1760-1860. Barton Levi St. Armand is Professor of English at Brown University and Actmg Chairman of its American Civilization Program. In addition to two books on H. P. Lovecraft-The Roots of Horror in the Fiction of HPL ( 1977) and HP L: Neiv England Decadent (1979)-he has published on Hawthorne, Frost, Jewett, Dickinson, Poe, Cooper and Whitman in such Journals as American Quarterly, Criticism, Emerson Society QuarterZr, Bucknell Review, American Transcendental Quarter~y, American Literature, Cabban , and Michigan Quarterly Review. He has recently finished work on a study entitled Emi(y Dickinson and Her Culture: The Soul's Society, an attempt to relate Dickinson's poetry to main currents of nineteenth-century aesthetics. Bruce Tucker is an Assistant Professor and Killam Research Associate...

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