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  • Contributors

Elizabeth Buettner is a Lecturer in Modern British and Imperial History at the University of York, UK. She is the author of Empire Families: Britons and Late Imperial India (Oxford University Press, 2004), which was the joint winner of the Annual Women's History Network Book Prize for 2004 and shortlisted for the Times Higher Education Supplement's Young Academic Author of the Year Award in 2005.

Carolyn J. Dean is Professor of History at Brown University. She is the author, most recently, of The Fragility of Empathy after the Holocaust (Cornell University Press, 2004) and The Frail Social Body: Pornography, Homosexuality and Other Social Fantasies in Interwar France (University of California Press, 2000).

Sławomir Kapralski is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the Warsaw School of Social Psychology and at the Centre for Social Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. He is the author of Wartosci i poznanie socjologiczne (Values and sociological knowledge) (Kraków, 1995) and the editor of, among others, The Jews in Poland (Kraków, 1999); and Democracies, Markets, Institutions: Global Tendencies in Local Contexts (Warsaw, 2002).

Renée M. Sentilles is an Assistant Professor of History and Director of American Studies at Case Western Reserve University. She is the author of Performing Menken: Adah Isaacs Menken and the Birth of American Celebrity (Cambridge University Press, 2003).

Robert A. Ventresca is an Associate Professor of History at King's University College, University of Western Ontario. He is the author, [End Page 198] most recently, of From Fascism to Democracy: Culture and Politics in the Italian Election of 1948 (University of Toronto Press, 2004) and is currently working on a history of Jewish-Catholic relations in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Ewa Wolentarska-Ochman received her Ph.D. in 2004 from the European Studies Research Institute at the University of Salford. Awarded the Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship in 2005, she is currently engaged in research on the commemoration of World War II in post-1989 Poland. [End Page 199]

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