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Jacqueline Jones Royster is a professor of Literature, Communication, and Culture and the dean of the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her books include Southern Horrors and Other Writings : The Anti-Lynching Campaign of Ida B. Wells-Barnett; Traces of a Stream: Literacy and Social Change among African American Women; Profiles of Ohio Women, 1803–2003; two coedited collections, Double-Stitch: Black Women Write about Mothers and Daughters and Calling Cards: Theory and Practice in Studies of Race, Gender, and Culture; a college-level reader, Critical Inquiries: Readings on Culture and Community; and consulting editorship for two school textbook series, Writer’s Choice: Grammar and Composition, grades 6–8, and Glencoe Literature: Reader’s Choice. Currently, she is serving as a coeditor of the Norton Anthology of Rhetoric and Writing. Gesa E. Kirsch is a professor of English and a cofounder of the Women’s Leadership Institute (now the Center for Women and Business) at Bentley University in Waltham, Massachusetts. Her publications include Ethical Dilemmas in Feminist Research: The Politics of Location, Interpretation, and Publication; Women Writing the Academy: Audience, Authority, and Transformation; and several coedited collections: A Sense of Audience in Written Communication; Methods and Methodology in Composition Research; Ethics and Representation in Qualitative Studies of Literacy; Feminism and Composition: A Critical Sourcebook; and most recently, Beyond the Archives: Research as a Lived Process. ...

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