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Contributors Rachel M. Brownstein is professor of English at the Graduate School of the City University of New York. She is well known for her book Becoming a Heroine. Amanda Collins recently received a master's degree from the University of Alabama. She works in the book trade. M. Casey Diana teaches in the English department of the University of Illinois. She works on representations of addiction in early modern literature . Rebecca Dickson teaches in the Writing Program of the University of Colorado . She has published (with Frank Grady) Surviving the Day: An American P.O. W in Japan. Her field of research is nineteenth-century American literature . Carol M. Dole is associate professor and former chair of the English department of Ursinus College. She has published articles in Literature/Film Quarterly , English Language Notes, Southern Review, and Studies in Short Fiction. H. Elisabeth Ellington is completing a Ph.D. at Brandeis. She received her undergraduate degree from Vesalius College, Belgium, and a masters from the University of New Hampshire. She is working on women writers during World War 1. Suzanne Ferriss is associate professor of Liberal Arts at Nova Southeastern University. She has recently published (with Shari Benstock) On Fashion and Footnotes: On Shoes. Sayre Greenfield is associate professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg. He is the author of The Ends ofAllegory and of articles published in Philological Quarterly, Criticism, and Genre. Lisa Hopkins is senior lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University. She is widely 214 Contributors published in Renaissance drama, with books on Ford, Shakespeare, and Marlowe, and has many articles in print, including one on Jane Austen and money. Deborah Kaplan is associate professor of English at George Mason University . She is author ofJane Austen among Women as well as articles in Criticism, Theatre Survey, Prose Studies, and other journals. Devoney Looser is visiting assistant professor of English at Arizona State University. She is the editor ofJane Austen and Discourses of Feminism, coeditor of Generations, and author of many articles on Jane Austen. Nora Nachumi teaches at Stem College for Women, part of Yeshiva University . She has published in Eighteenth-Century Fiction and Romanticism on the Net. Cheryl Nixon is assistant professor of English at Babson College. She has published in Restoration and is researching the guardian/ward relationship in eighteenth-century fiction and law. Kristin Flieger Samuelian is a visiting assistant professor ofEnglish at George Mason University and has published articles in Nineteenth-Century Studies and Victorian Newsletter. She is preparing an edition of Austens Emma for Broadview Press. Linda Troost is associate professor of English at Washington and Jefferson College. She is editor of the annual Eighteenth-Century Women and has published essays in Eighteenth-Century Studies, The Dictionary ofLiterary Biography, and The Revised New Grove Dictionary ofMusic. ...

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