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Notes on Contributors 129 Notes on Contributors James D.Brasch is an Associate Professor of English at McMaster University. His publications include The Portrait of a Lady: A Study Guide (1966)and essavs onFitzgerald, Hemingway and Steinbeck in suchjournals as Modernist siudies and San Jose Studies. With Joseph T. Sigman, he has forthcoming in theFitzgerald/ Hemingway Annual a preliminary report on Hemingway's libraryat Finca Vigfa, Cuba. His major research project is Hemingway's reading. lhomasA. Burns is an Assistant Professor of Folklore and Folklife at the University of Pennsylvania. A professional folklorist, he is the author of Doing the Wash: An Expressive Culture and Personality Study of a Joke and 11 ,1 Tellers(1975) and essays on American folklore and popular culture, especially as reflected in the performing and visual arts, in such journals as Journalal American Folklore, Western Folklore, Southern Folklore Quarterly,· Keystone Folklore Quarterly and Nett· York Folklore. , Keith Cassidyisan Assistant Professor of History at the University of Guelph. He isBookReview Editor of the Canadian Review a/Studies in Nationalism, and theauthor of"Mackenzie King and American Progressivism," one of the e~says inMackenzie King: Widening the Debate, which will be published this 1 earby Macmillan of Canada. 1 Theodore Colson is an Associate Professor of English at the University of ' ~ew Brunswick.He has published poetry and short stories, as wellas essays onAmerican fiction. An essay about home in Canadian, American and West Indianfiction is forthcoming in English Studies in Canada. He is on the 1 editorial staffs of £SC and The Fiddlehead. Howard I. Kushner is an Associate Professor of History at Concordia University, Montreal. His books are Conflict on the North 1 ,vest Coast: : 4mericanRussian Rivalry in the Pacific Northwest, 1790-1867 (1975) and, iith Anne H. Sherrill, John Milton Hay: The Union of Poetry and Politics (1977). He has published essays as well on the Northwest and John Hay in \'ew England Quarterly, The Historian, Western Historical Quarterly, Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Oregon Historical Quarterly, Cal[fornia Historical Quarterly, and Journal of the West. He has also published on psychohistory in the Psychocultural Review. He is presently : atworkon a psychoanalytic approach to American migration, 1600-1870. IStuart Levineis Professor of American Studies at the University of Kansas. . Inadditionto Edgar Poe, Seer and Craftsman (1972)and The Short Fiction tifEdgar Allan Poe, with Susan Levine (1976), his books include, with : \'ancy0. Lurie, The American Indian Today (1968,1970),and his edition of I Charles Caffin, The Story of American Painting (1970). His essays have I appeared in Poe Studies, Emerson Society Quarterly, American Studies, 4mericanQuarterly, and Midwest Quarterly. He is Editor and Founding Editor of American Studies, now in its seventeenth year. 130 Notes on Contributors Graham Petrie is Professor of English at McMaster University. In addition to his The Cinema of Franr;ois Tru.ffaut (1970), he has published essaysin Film Comment, Film Quarterly, Yale Review, Journal of European Studies New Hungarian Quarterly, and elsewhere. His book on the contemporar; Hungarian cinema will be published this year. · Bruno Ramirez is an Assistant Professor of History at the Universitede Montreal. In addition to various articles on American and comparative labor history in journals such as Relations Industrielles (Laval), La Critica Sociologica (Rome), Radical America, Telos and Zeroi,vork, he is the co-author, with Gisela Bock and Paolo Carpignano, of La Forma:ione dell'Operaio Massa negli USA, 1898-1922 (1976). Another book, When Workers Fight: The Politics of Industrial Relations in the ProgressiveEra, 1897-1916, is due for publication this year. Robert Ian Scott is Professor of English at the University of Saskatchewan. He has published articles about semantics, grammars and curses insuch journals as Linguistics, Lingua, Language and Speech and Franr;aisdansle Monde; about Eliot in Queen's Quarterly; about C. S. Peirce and T. E.Hulme1 in James Joyce Review; about Gary Snyder in North American Reviewandl Concerning Poetry; about The Great Gatsby and the second law of thermodynamics in Queen's Quarterly; and about Robinson Jeffers in Racki Mountain Review and Harper's. His transformational rhetoric text, The Writer's Self-Starter, was published in 1972. He is now completing an edition of thirty poems "Jeffers did...

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