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Contributors Alexandra Green is curator of Asian art and acting museum director at Denison University in Granville, Ohio. She has an MA and PhD from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. In addition to researching the Denison collection of Burmese textiles and Buddhist material, she has focused upon eighteenth-century wall paintings in Burma, and is the author of several articles on the topic. Other publications include Burma: Art and Archaeology published by the British Museum Press in 2002. Current research interests include a nineteenth-century Burmese manuscript in the Denison collection and foreign influences upon murals in Burma. She may be reached at greenar@denison.edu. Chie Ikeya is a visiting assistant professor in the Department of History at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. She investigates the fundamental links between social and economic change, colonial representations of women, nationalist discourse, and the development of reforms and protest movements on behalf of women and against gender-based discrimination. Additionally, Ikeya documents gender-specific relations of power in pre-colonial Burma through a survey of unpublished Burmese legal texts and court records from the nineteenth century, and evaluates the impact of British and Japanese imperialism on local ideas and practices. She may be reached at cikeya@holycross.edu. Yin Ker was trained in art history at the University of Paris-Sorbonne and at the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (Paris). Currently in Asia, she is furthering her understanding of twentieth-century art in Burma/Myanmar and the region, with particular interest in the construction of art, the artist, and art history, as well as modern and contemporary visual arts of Buddhist inspiration. She assistsin tutoring arts ofAsiaat the Nanyang Technological University, and oversees the collection of modern Burmese art at the Singapore Art Museum. She may be reached at yin.kermandrella@gmail.com. Jacques P. Leider is an historian and research scholar at the Ecole Française d’Extrême-Orient/EFEO (Paris). Since 2002, he hasbeenheadoftheEFEOCentreinYangon(Myanmar/Burma) where he initiated a project to collect and digitize Arakanese palm-leaf manuscripts and stone inscriptions. For many years, his research focus has been the history and historiography of the Buddhist kingdom of Mrauk U. In line with the EFEO tradition of studying native non-canonical Buddhist texts and traditions, his recent research has dealt with the social life of the monkhood. Leider teaches in his native Luxembourg and at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. He may be reached at jacques.leider@education.lu. ...

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