Indiana University Press
  • Contributors

Richard S. Albright

Richard S. Albright is Assistant Professor of English at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania and is the author of articles on nineteenth-century Gothic and sensation fiction. Some of his other research interests include composition pedagogy and Buffy the Vampire Slayer's use of narrative and genre.

Raymond A. Anselment

Raymond A. Anselment, Professor of English at the University of Connecticut, has published a series of essays on seventeenth-century women as well as edited for the Camden series The Remembrances of Elizabeth Freke, 1671–1714. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, he has written three book-length studies on the religious, political, and medical dimensions of seventeenth-century English literature. The Realms of Apollo: Literature and Healing in Seventeenth-Century England was chosen by Choice as an Outstanding Academic Book. He has also published numerous essays on a range of seventeenth-century authors and issues.

Scott Paul Gordon

Scott Paul Gordon is Associate Professor of English at Lehigh University. He has published The Power of the Passive Self in English Literature, 1640– 1770 (Cambridge UP, 2002) and has recently completed a study called The Practice of Quixotism. Gordon has written numerous articles on seventeenth-and eighteenth-century subjects, including "Reading Patriot Art: James Barry's King Lear" in Eighteenth-Century Studies (2003).

Susan E. Hiner

Susan E. Hiner is an Assistant Professor of French and also teaches in the Women's Studies Program at Vassar College. With the support of a Mellon [End Page 119] grant, she will be working on a book project entitled Mode, Monde et Demi-Monde: Women, Fashion and Social Mobility in Nineteenth-Century France. She is the author of "Hand Writing: Dismembering and Re-membering in Nodier, Nerval, and Maupassant" (Nineteenth-Century French Studies 30.3–4 [Spring-Summer 2002], 300–14); "Paris Pastoral: Cultivating Anarchy in Zola's Fin de Siècle" (in Confrontations: Politics and Aesthetics in Nineteenth-Century France. Edited by Kathryn Grossman et al. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi, 2001: 249–58); and "In Cool Blood: Mourning Landscapes in Thérèse Raquin" (Excavatio 11 [1998]: 1–7).

Melissa Mowry

Melissa Mowry is an Associate Professor of English at St. John's University and is the author of The Bawdy Politic in Stuart England: Political Pornography and Prostitution, 1660–1714 (Ashgate, 2004).

Jessica Munns

Jessica Munns is Professor of Literature and Director of the Critical Cultural Studies Program at the University of Denver. She is editor of the journal Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Research and has published widely on Restoration and eighteenth-century literature. She has two new co-edited books forthcoming, a collection of essays on the eighteenth-century diary and a collection of plays based on Aphra Behn's Oroonoko.

Kathryn R. King

Kathryn R. King teaches English at the University of Montevallo. She is the author of Jane Barker, Exile: A Literary Career 1675–1725 (2000) as well as many essays on early modern women writers, and she is the co-editor of Eliza Haywood's The Female Spectator (2001). She is presently working on a critical biography of Haywood. [End Page 120]

Share