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The Contributors RICHARD B. VOWLES: Professor Vowles, chairman of Comparative Literature at the University of Wisconsin, teaches the course in Strindberg in the Department of Scandinavian Studies. JACKSON R. BRYER: Managing Editor of Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature, Mr. Bryer is doctoral candidate in the English Department at the University of Wisconsin. HANS ALlN: Mr. Alin is ail editor of The Swedish-American Tribune, published in Chicago. WALTER JOHNSON: Professor Johnson is Editor of Scandinavian Studies. His editing of Strindberg's historical plays has culminated in the definitive study, Strindberg and the Historical Drama, published this year by the University of Washington Press. B0RGE GEDS0 MADSEN: Professor Madsen's study, Strindberg's Naturalistic Theatre: Its Relation to French Naturalism, has just been published by Munksgaard in Copenllagen and by the University of Washington Press. He teaches in the Department of Scandinavian in the University of California, Berkeley. HAROLD H. BORLAND: Dr. Borland, Lecturer in Swedish at The University of Hull, is the author of Nietzsche's Influence on Swedish Literature with Special Reference to Strindberg, Ola Hansson, Heidenstam and Friiding, published in 1957. JOHN MILTON: Professor Milton is chairman of the English Department, Jamestown College, North Dakota. His article, "The Esthetic Fault of Strindberg's 'Dream Plays,''' appeared in Tulane Drama Review in 1960. HASKELL M. BLOCK: Professor of Comparative Literature at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, he is co-editor (with Robert G. Shedd) of Masters of Modern Drama. His study, Mallarme and the Symbolist Drama, will be published in 1963 by Wayne State University Press. KENNETH S. WHITE: After a year of teaching and research in French drama at the Institute for American Universities in Aix-en-Provence, Professor White has rejoined the Romance Languages Department of the University of Michigan . Among his current projects are studies of Lenormand and of French repertory troupes. BERNARD F. DUKORE: Assistant Professor of Speech and Drama, Los Angeles State College, Dr. Dukore has contributed articles on Shaw, Pinter, Ionesco, Beckett, Gelber, and others to such periodicals as Tulane Drama Review, Drama Survey, and Educational Theatre Journal. SISTER M. VINCENTIA, O.P.: Sister Vincentia, Professor of English at Albertus Magnus College in New Haven, holds a degree in music from Yale as well as degrees in English from Notre Dame and the University of Pennsylvania. Her article is part of a larger study of the impact of Wagnerism in modern dramaturgy. DAVID SCANLAN: Mr. Scanlan teaches theater at the University of Oregon. His translation of Strindberg's Coram Populo! appeared in the Winter, 1961, Tulane Drama Review. EVERT SPRINCHORN: Assistant Professor of drama at Vassar College, Dr. Sprinchorn is editing Strindberg's autobiographical writings for Doubleday Anchor Books. He has just translated Crimes and Crimes for production in Vassar's Experimental Theater. ...

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