- Notes on Contributors
Phoebe Dickerson is a PhD candidate at Cambridge University. Her thesis examines the significance of skin in early modern literature, paying particular attention to the dynamics of impressibility and revelation in seventeenth-century poetry.
David Ellis’s most recent book is Memoirs of a Leavisite: the decline and fall of ‘Cambridge English’ (Liverpool University Press, 2013).
Tim Hancock teaches English at the University of Ulster in Coleraine, specialising in Modernism, nineteenth-century verse, and love poetry.
Oliver Herford teaches English at Keble College and St Anne’s College, Oxford. He works on the late personal writings of Henry James, and on the relations between nineteenth-century letters and other modes of literary life-writing. He is editing James’s New York Edition Prefaces for Cambridge University Press.
Daniel Hitchens is a doctoral candidate at the University of Oxford. He is writing about Samuel Johnson as a religious author.
Charlotte Keith recently graduated from Pembroke College, Cambridge. She is currently studying for a post-graduate degree at Columbia Journalism School in New York, specialising in investigative journalism.
Matthew Peters has written articles on American literature and reviews of contemporary fiction for a number of journals and newspapers.
Johan A. Warodell is a PhD candidate at Lancaster University. He has published essays in the Conradian and the Yearbook of Conrad Studies. [End Page 402]