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  • Notes on Contributors

David Gervais is an editor of The Cambridge Quarterly.

Patrick Hayes is Fellow and Tutor in English at St John’s College, Oxford. His research focuses on ideas about culture and literary value in the post-war period; he has published a monograph on J. M. Coetzee.

Zachary Leader, Professor of English Literature at the University of Roehampton, is at work on a biography of Saul Bellow. He is the author, among other books, of The Life of Kingsley Amis and Revision and Romantic Authorship, and the editor of The Movement Reconsidered and The Letters of Kingsley Amis.

Alex Niven is a PhD candidate at St John’s College, Oxford. His first book, Folk Opposition, was published by Zero in 2011, and his second, Oasis’s Definitely Maybe, is forthcoming from Bloomsbury in 2014.

Neil Pattison studied and taught at Cambridge between 2001 and 2011. He is presently writing a book on the fate of lyric.

Yvonne Reddick studied at the University of Cambridge and then for a PhD at the University of Warwick. Her thesis is on the poet Ted Hughes’s influences and environmental campaigns. She has published work on Ted Hughes, Federico Garcia Lorca and ecopoetics in journals such as Modern Language Review, and also poetry with the small press Seapressed.

Duncan White is a Newhouse Fellow at Wellesley College for the academic year 2013-4. He received his DPhil from the University of Oxford in 2011, is co-editor of Transnational Nabokov (2009), and is a literary critic for the Daily Telegraph. [End Page 305]

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