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  • Notes on Contributors

kristina bross, associate professor of English at Purdue University and author of Dry Bones and Indian Sermons, is currently editing the Eliot Tracts for the Massachusetts Historical Society.

martin brückner is assistant professor of English at the University of Delaware. He is the author of The Rule of Geography in Early America: Maps, Textbooks, and the Making of Identity, forthcoming from the University of North Carolina Press.

bruce burgett is associate professor of American Studies in the Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences program at the University of Washington-Bothell, and graduate faculty in the English Department at the University of Washington-Seattle. He is the author of Sentimental Bodies: Sex, Gender, and Citizenship in the Early Republic, and is currently working on two book projects: American Sex: Cultures of Sexual Reformin and beyond the Antebellum U.S. and Keywords of American Cultural Studies (co-edited with Glenn Hendler).

lorrayne carroll, associate professor of English at the University of Southern Maine, is currently completing her study Rhetorical Drag: Gender, Captivity, and the Writing of History for Kent State University Press. She has agreed to superintend an ongoing roundtable on pedagogy for EAL.

pattie cowell, former chair of the Department of English at Colorado State University, is currently preparing a new edition of her landmark anthology, Women Poets in Pre-Revolutionary America.

nan goodman, associate professor of English at the University of Colorado, is author of Shifting the Blame: Literature, Law, and the Theory of Accidents in Nineteenth-Century America. Trained in law as well as literature, Goodman is working on a study of treaties and social relations in Puritan and Algonquin New England.

paul k. longmore, professor of history at San Francisco State University, is author of The Invention of George Washington and one of the preeminent authorities in the field of Disability Studies.

laura j. murray is associate professor of English at Queen’s University. She is the editor of To Do Good to My Indian Brethren: The Writings of Joseph Johnson, 1751–1776 (Univ. of Massachusetts, 1998), and is currently working on a comparative study of copyright discourses in the United States and Canada, past and present.

meredith marie neuman is assistant professor of English at Clark University.

pam perkins, of the University of Manitoba, since the mid-1990s has been deeply involved in the recovery of the literary work of Anne Grant. [End Page 405]

scott peeples is associate professor of English at The College of Charleston. He is the author of The Afterlife of Edgar Allan Poe (2003).

philip round is associate professor of English and American Indian and Native Studies at the University of Iowa, where he coordinates Iowa’s American Indian and Native Studies Program.

emily todd, assistant professor of English at Westfield State College, is interested in transatlantic literary relations in the early nineteenth century. She is currently co-editing a collection of essays entitled Transatlantic Stowe: Essays on Harriet Beecher Stowe and European Culture. [End Page 406]

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