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  • Contributors

Stephen M. Buhler is Professor of English at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and the author of Shakespeare in the Cinema: Ocular Proof (2002).

John D. Cox is the DuMez Professor of English at Hope College and the author most recently of Seeming Knowledge: Shakespeare and Skeptical Faith (2007). He is currently editing Julius Caesar for the Internet Shakespeare Editions.

Daniel Juan Gil is Associate Professor of English at Texas Christian University; he is the author of Before Intimacy: Asocial Sexuality in Early Modern England.

Barbara Hodgdon, Professor of English at the University of Michigan, is the author of several books on early modern drama, including The Shakespeare Trade (1998) and, most recently, A Companion to Shakespeare and Performance, coedited with W. B. Worthen (2005). She is the editor of the Arden3 Taming of the Shrew (forthcoming, 2009).

Lisa Hopkins is Professor of English at Sheffield Hallam University and coeditor of Shakespeare, the journal of the British Shakespeare Association. Her publications include Shakespeare on the Edge: Border-Crossing in the Tragedies and the "Henriad" (2005) and Beginning Shakespeare (2005).

Sean Keilen is the author of Vulgar Eloquence: On the Renaissance Invention of English Literature (2006) and an editor of The Forms of Renaissance Thought: New Essays on Literature and Culture (2008) and Shakespeare: The Critical Complex (1999). Prior to taking up his current position as Associate Professor of English at The College of William and Mary, he taught at Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania.

Aaron Kitch, Assistant Professor of English at Bowdoin College, has published essays on economics and literature in Renaissance Drama, SEL, and [End Page 236] Religion and Literature. He recently completed a manuscript on poetry and political economy in early modern England between 1570 and 1630.

Bonnie Lander is reading for a D.Phil. on John Milton at Oxford University. Her publications include articles in Parergon and Sensibilities. Her work on Cymbeline began with an honors thesis written at Sydney University.

Kathleen Lynch is Executive Director of the Folger Institute. She is completing a book on the publication of autobiographical religious experience in the seventeenth-century Anglo-Atlantic world.

Marianne Novy, Professor of English and Women's Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, has authored and edited a number of books about gender in Shakespeare and in later appropriations of his writings. Her most recent book is Reading Adoption: Family and Difference in Fiction and Drama; she is now writing about Shakespeare's representations of religious and other outsiders.

Michael Ragussis, Professor of English at Georgetown University, is the author most recently of Figures of Conversion: "The Jewish Question" and English National Identity; he is currently completing a book on ethnic performance and national identity in Georgian England.

David Roberts, Professor and Head of English at Birmingham City University, United Kingdom, has articles in recent issues of The Review of English Studies and The Cambridge Quarterly and is currently working on a biography of Thomas Betterton.

James Schiffer is Professor and Head of the English Department at Northern Michigan University. His edited collection Twelfth Night: New Critical Essays is forthcoming from Routledge in 2009. He is also leading the editorial team for the New Variorum Twelfth Night.

W. R. Streitberger, Professor of English at the University of Washington, is the author of Court Revels, 1485–1559, and the editor of Jacobean and Caroline Revels Accounts, 1603–1642; he is currently working on a study of Elizabeth I's Revels. [End Page 237]

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