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  • Contributors

Jonathan Mallinson, university lecturer (CUF) in French and fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, works on French theatre and prose fiction in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He is preparing a book on the seventeenth-century French novel.

Giulia Pacini is assistant professor of French at the College of William and Mary. She works on discourses of sociability in eighteenth-century France.

Marc Olivier is assistant professor of French at Brigham Young University.

Sharon Smith Palo is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is currently writing her dissertation on the relationship between the early English novel, educational discourse, and eighteenth-century attitudes regarding women's function within public life.

Tara Ghoshal Wallace is associate professor of English at The George Washington University. Her current book project is Imperial Contradictions: Home and Periphery in Eighteenth-Century Literature.

John P. Zomchick is professor and head of the Department of English, University of Tennessee, and author of Family and the Law in Eighteenth-Century Fiction: The Public Conscience in the Private Sphere (1993).

Monika Fludernik is professor of English at the University of Freiburg, Germany. Her research interests include narratology, postcolonial theory, eighteenth-century aesthetics, and prison writings.

Leon Guilhamet, former chair and now professor of English at The City College of New York, is author of Satire and the Transformation of Genre.

Lisa Wood is assistant professor of Contemporary Studies and English, and teaches in the Children's Education and Development Option at Wilfrid Laurier University (Brantford). She is the author of Modes of Discipline: Women, Conservatism, and the Novel after the French Revolution (2003).

Sophie Gee is assistant professor of English at Princeton University. She is currently completing a book manuscript entitled Making Waste: Leftovers and the Literary Imagination from "Paradise Lost" to "Tom Jones," and she has most recently published essays about remaindered matter in Dryden, Swift, and Pope.

Richard Nash, professor of English at Indiana University, is the author of Wild Enlightenment: The Borders of Human Identity in the Eighteenth Century (2003). His current book project is entitled Thoroughbred: Cultural Metaphor and the Invention of an Animal.

Lucie Desjardins est professeure au département d'études littéraires de l'Université du Québec à Montréal et a notamment publié Le Corps parlant: Savoirs et représentations des passions au XVIIee siècle (2001).

Emmanuelle Sauvage est professeure adjointe au département d'études françaises de l'Université de Waterloo. Elle travaille actuellement sur les expériences optiques menées en France au tournant des Lumières.

Philip Knee est professeur au département de philosophie de l'Université d'Ottawa.

Evan Gottlieb is assistant professor of English at Oregon State University, where he teaches eighteenth-century and Romantic British literature.

Marie-Christine Pioffet est professeure adjointe au département d'études françaises de la Faculté des arts de l'Université York.

Jacqueline Chammas est chargée de cours à l'Université de Montréal. Elle s'intéresse aux relations incestueuses dans la prose des Lumières et à leurs rapports avec la loi, la société et la famille. Elle a publié plusieurs articles sur le sujet.

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