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List of Contributors
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Contributors Emma Anderson holds a Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Harvard University and has taught since 2005 at the bilingual University of/Université d’Ottawa. She is the author of The Betrayal of Faith: The Tragic Journey of a Colonial Native Convert (Harvard University Press, 2007), which is also available in a French-language edition (les Presses de l’Université Laval, 2009). The work won honors from the American Academy of Religion, the Society of French Colonial History, and the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences. Anderson’s forthcoming book explores the dynamic historical evolution of the Catholic cult of the North American martyrs, eight Jesuits missionaries who died violently in the midseventeenth century. Mary Baine Campbell is the author of The Witness and the Other World: Exotic European Travel Writing – (Cornell University Press, 1988) and Wonder and Science: Imagining Worlds in Early Modern Europe (Cornell University Press, 1999), as well as many articles, essays, and works of poetry. A member of the faculty of the English Department at Brandeis University, she is currently writing a book on early modern dreams in the Atlantic World. Luı́s R. Corteguera is Associate Professor of History at the University of Kansas and the author of For the Common Good: Popular Politics in Barcelona , – (Cornell University Press, 2002), and Death by Effigy: A Tale from the Mexican Inquisition (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012), and is co-editor of Women, Texts and Authority in the Early Modern Spanish World (Ashgate, 2003). The Catalan translation of For the Common Good (Eumo, 2005) was finalist for the Premi Ciutat de Barcelona 2005. He has received fellowships from the ACLS, the Huntington Library, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the National Humanities Center. 306 Contributors Matthew Dennis is Professor of History and Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, and has research interests in colonial America and the early national United States, the history of American Indians, American colonialism, nationalism, and identity, the American landscape and environment , and public memory. His most recent book is Seneca Possessed: Indians, Witchcraft, and Power in the Early American Republic (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010). Carla Gerona teaches at the School of History, Technology, and Society of the Georgia Institute of Technology, offering courses in early American, Atlantic, and borderlands history. Her first book, Night Journeys: The Power of Dreams in Transatlantic Quaker Culture (University of Virginia Press, 2004), traced the ways in which an innovative religious group interpreted their dreams to shape their world. She is currently working on a study of the multi-ethnic borderland in Texas prior to its annexation by the United States. Marı́a V. Jordán is on the faculty of both the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the Department of History at Yale University. The author of Soñar la historia. Riesgo, creatividad y religión en los sueños de Lucrecia de León (Siglo XXI, 2007), she has made many contributions to the literature on dreams in early modern Spain, Portugal, and Latin America. Luı́s Filipe Silvério Lima holds several degrees from the University of São Paulo and is on the faculty in history at Federal University of São Paulo. His recent research includes a funded project entitled, ‘‘The SeventeenthCentury Interpretations of the Dreams of Five Kingdoms: Sebastianists, Joãnists, and Fifth-Monarchy Men,’’ and a second project with the working title ‘‘Iconography of Dreams in Early Modern Europe and America.’’ Phyllis Mack is Professor of History and Women’s Studies at Rutgers University and the author of several books and many articles in the history of religious experience, including Visionary Women: Ecstatic Prophecy in Seventeenth-Century England (University of California Press, 1992) and Heart Religion in the British Enlightenment: Gender and Emotion in Early Methodism (Cambridge University Press, 2008). Ann Marie Plane is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The author of Colonial Intimacies: Indian (2024-03-19 11:00 GMT) Contributors 307 Marriage in Early New England (Cornell University Press, 2000), she is currently at work on Invisible Worlds: Dreams, Cosmology, and Colonialism in Seventeenth-Century New England. Plane’s research focuses on colonial New England history, especially relations between Native Americans and English colonists in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries; she holds a Ph.D. from Brandeis University and a Psy.D. in psychoanalytic clinical theory from the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. Andrew Redden holds a Ph.D. from the...