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Hypatia 19.2 (2004) 209-213



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Notes on Contributors

Julia J. Aaron has taught Philosophy at Clarion University of Pennsylvania since 1992, where she specializes in ethics. Under the name Julia J. Bartkowiak, she and Uma Narayan coedited Having and Raising Children: Unconventional Families, Hard Choices, and the Social Good (Penn State Press, 1999). (jaaron@clarion.edu)
Cathryn Bailey is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Minnesota State University, where she has worked since 1994. For the past two years, she has been a Mellon Fellow at Duke University, focusing on academic writing. Recent areas of interest include global feminism, animal ethics, and epistemological issues related to feminist research methods. (catbail@duke.edu)
Sharyn Clough is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Oregon State University where she teaches philosophy of science and epistemology. Her monograph Beyond Epistemology: A Pragmatist Approach to Feminist Science Studies has just been published (2003, Rowman and Littlefield) as has her edited collection Siblings Under The Skin: Feminism, Social Justice, and Analytic Philosophy (2003, Davies). (sharyn.clough@oregonstate.edu)
Penelope Deutscher is Associate Professor in Philosophy at Northwestern University. She is the author of Yielding Gender: Feminism, Deconstruction and the History of Philosophy, and of A Politics of Impossible Difference: The Later Work of Luce Irigaray. She is the coeditor, with Kelly Oliver, of Enigmas: Essays on Sarah Kofman. (p-deutscher@northwestern.edu)
Sarah Donovan is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Wagner College, where she teaches a wide range of courses grounded in the history of philosophy. She received her Ph.D. from Villanova University in 2002. Her research interests include social philosophy, feminism, and psychoanalysis. She recently published "Overcoming Oedipal Exclusions: An Irigarayan Critique of Judith Butler" in the 2002 SPEP Supplement of Philosophy Today. (sdonovan@wagner.edu)
Therese Boos Dykeman, an independent scholar with interdisciplinary interests in rhetoric and philosophy, is an adjunct professor at Fairfield and Sacred Heart universities in Fairfield, Connecticut. The editor of American Women Philosophers, 1650-1930: Six Exemplary Thinkers and The Neglected [End Page 209] Canon: Nine Women Philosophers, First to the Twentieth Century, she recently coedited a six-volume republication of The Social, Political and Philosophical Works of Catharine E. Beecher. (tbdykeman@aol.com)
Catherine Villanueva Gardner is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth. She has published work on the history of women philosophers, including Rediscovering Women Philosophers: Genre and the Boundaries of Philosophy, Boulder: Westview Press. She is currently working on a book that examines feminist approaches to the history of philosophy. (cgardner@umassd.edu)
Lisa Heldke teaches philosophy and women's studies at Gustavus Adolphus College. She is the author of Exotic Appetites: Ruminations of a Food Adventurer. (heldke@gustavus.edu)
Dawn Jakubowski has research and teaching interests that include theoretical and applied ethics, race and gender studies, feminist theory, and social and political philosophy. Her work has appeared in the Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories, the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, and the Journal of the Southwestern Philosophical Society; and she has made presentations to such groups as the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, the Central States Philosophical Association, and the 10th Conference of Cuban and North American Philosophers and Social Scientists. (dawnj@mail.uca.edu)
Nancy S. Love is Associate Professor of Political Science and Communication Arts and Sciences at Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of Marx, Nietzsche, and Modernity (Columbia 1986, reissued 1996). Her articles appear in Theory & Event; differences; Hypatia; New German Critique; Polity; and Women and Politics. She is currently writing a book entitled Musical Democracy. (NSL1@psu.edu)
Vivian M. May is Assistant Professor of Women's Studies at Syracuse University, where she teaches courses in feminist theory, feminist epistemology, and introduction to Women's Studies. She has published articles about the literary and philosophical innovations of writers such as James Baldwin, Anna Julia Cooper, and Melvin Dixon. She has also published articles exploring the epistemic politics of interdisciplinary methodologies and critical pedagogies. She is currently working on a book manuscript analyzing literature as a pedagogical and epistemological space, tentatively titled Lessons for Liberation in Contemporary Fiction. (vmmay@syr.edu) [End Page...

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