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  • Contributors

Gerd Horten (ghorten@cu-portland.edu) is Professor of History at Concordia University—Portland, Oregon. He teaches American and international/transnational history and is the author of Radio Goes to War: The Cultural Politics of Propaganda during World War II (2002). He is currently working on a study on American-German relations in the 1970s.

Seth Howes (howes@oakland.edu) is Assistant Professor of German at Oakland University. He received his PhD in German from the University of Michigan in Spring 2012, and is currently working on a book project which studies the theory and practices of committed authorship in the Cold War cultures of divided Germany.

Ari Linden (ari.linden@ku.edu) is a visiting assistant professor of German at the University of Kansas. He received his PhD from Cornell University in 2013 and is currently working on a book that addresses the theoretical stakes of satire in twentieth-century German and Austrian drama.

Birgit Tautz (btautz@bowdoin.edu) is Associate Professor at Bowdoin College. Author of Reading and Seeing Ethnic Differences in the Enlightenment: From China to Africa and editor of Colors 1800/1900/2000: Signs of Ethnic Difference, she is working on a new book, Translating the World: Remaking Late Eighteenth-century Literature between Hamburg and Weimar.

Richard Weikart (rweikart@csustan.edu) is Professor of History at California State University, Stanislaus. He has published four books, including Hitler's Ethic: The Nazi Pursuit of Evolutionary Progress (2009) and From Darwin to Hitler (2004). He is currently working on a book on Hitler's religion. [End Page 749]

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