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  • About the Contributors

Stephanie Clare completed her PhD in women's and gender studies at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, in 2011. She is currently an Andrew W. Mellon postdoctoral fellow in feminist and gender theory at the University of Oxford. Her publications include "Agency, Signification, Temporality" in Hypatia and, forthcoming in differences, "Feeling Cold: Phenomenology, Spatiality, and the Politics of Sensation."

Steven Epstein is professor of sociology and John C. Shaffer Professor in the Humanities at Northwestern University, where he is a co-convener of the Sexualities Project at Northwestern. His books include Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge (1996) and Inclusion: The Politics of Difference in Medical Research (2007).

Corey McEleney is assistant professor of English at Fordham University, where he works in the fields of Renaissance literature, literary and cultural theory, and gender and sexuality studies. He is currently at work on a study titled "Vanity Fare: Pleasure, Futility, and Early Modern Literature."

Aimee Carrillo Rowe is associate professor of communication studies at California State University, Northridge. She teaches and writes in the areas of rhetoric, feminist theory, and cultural studies. Her first book, Power Lines: On the Subject of Feminist Alliances (2008), theorizes relational possibilities for antiracist feminist futures. She has two books forthcoming: Silence, Feminism, Power: Reflections at the Edges of Sound (coedited with Sheena Malhotra), on the political possibilities for silence beyond its equation with oppression, and Answer the Call: Virtual Migration in Indian Call Centers (coauthored with Sheena Malhotra and Kimberlee Perez), an ethnographic study of call center agents' "migration through time."

T. J. Tallie is a PhD candidate in the history department at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. As a critical historian of the British Empire, he works specifically on the relationship between race, masculinity, and sovereignty in nineteenth-century colonial South Africa. He is completing his dissertation, "Limits of Settlement: Racialized Masculinity, Sovereignty, and the Imperial Project in Colonial Natal, 1850-1897." [End Page 278]

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