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  • Contributors

Priya Venkatesan Hays holds a master of science in genetics and a doctorate in comparative literature. She has published works on science, the humanities and society, literary criticism, and science in New Genetics/New Identities; Social Semiotics; Biosemiotics; Bulletin of Science; Technology and Society; L’Esprit Createur; and Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases.

Matthias Krug holds a European PhD in English linguistics and literature and publishes fiction (L, Selfishness, and Brave New Words) and journalism (the BBC, Al Jazeera International, Arts Monthly Australia, the Huffington Post, the Irish Examiner, and the Providence Journal). He is editor of the Doha Review.

Nicholas O. Pagan is a professor of arts, humanities, and social sciences at Eastern Mediterranean University, in Northern Cyprus. His publications include articles in Foundations of Science, Philological Quarterly, Post Script, and Mosaic. He has just completed a monograph titled Literary Minds: From Phenomenology to Thing Theory.

Concetta Principe is completing her dissertation at York University, Toronto. Her research relies on a Lacanian psychoanalytic method as adapted by Alain Badiou and Slavoj Žižek. Her areas of interest center on the letters of Saint Paul; twentieth-century American, British, and Canadian women’s literature; and American science fiction literature and film.

Debra Shostak is professor of English at the College of Wooster, in Ohio. Author of Philip Roth—Countertexts, Counterlives (2004) and editor of Philip Roth: American Pastoral, The Human Stain, The Plot Against [End Page 294] America (2011), she has published widely on contemporary American fiction writers as well as on film.

Harry F. Thompson is executive director of the Center for Western Studies at Augustana College, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where he also teaches courses in northern plains studies. He is an associate fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. [End Page 295]

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