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  • Contributors

Juan Espindola (juan.espindola.mata@gmail.com) is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Frankfurt. He received his doctoral degree from the University of Michigan. His work focuses on transitional justice, particularly in Germany and at the international level. He is currently preparing a book project on Stasi collaborators.

Carolin Dorothée Lange (clange@u.washington.edu) studied German literature and history in Germany and Switzerland. She holds a PhD in literature from Ruhr University Bochum, and was a postdoctoral fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (Cologne). She currently is a visiting scholar at the University of Washington.

Dietrich Orlow (dorlow@bu.edu) is Professor (emeritus) of History at Boston University. His writings on twentieth-century German and comparative European history include, most recently, The Lure of Fascism in Western Europe (2009). The 7th edition of his college textbook, A History of Modern Germany: 1871 to Present, was published in 2011.

Michael P. Ryan (michaelp.ryan@duke.edu) is a visiting assistant professor and American Council of Learned Societies New Faculty Fellow of German Languages and Literature and the Program in Literature at Duke University. His research interests include literature and culture of the Weimar Republic, Film Studies, Media Studies, and German-Jewish Studies.

James Van Dyke (vandykej@missouri.edu) teaches art history at the University of Missouri–Columbia. His research and publications focus on German art, visual culture, and politics between the World Wars. He is currently working on a book on Otto Dix. [End Page 495]

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