In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

symploke 13.1/2 (2006) 382-383



[Access article in PDF]

Notes on Contributors

Anu Aneja is now heading the Center for Women's Education at Indira Gandhi National Open University, New Delhi. She previously held the Rebecca Brown Professor of Latin Literatures and Languages position at Ohio Wesleyan University. She has published in the area of contemporary French and Indian literatures.
Zafer Aracagök teaches Continental philosophy at Bilkent University, Turkey and is currently preparing a book on Deleuze. He is the author of three books and various journal articles on the questions of image; resonance and noise in philosophy; and philosophy of music.
Ian Barnard is Assistant Professor of English and Teachers for a New Era faculty at California State University, Northridge. He is author of Queer Race: Cultural Interventions in the Racial Politics of Queer Theory.
R. M. Berry, Professor of English at Florida State University, is author of the novel Leonardo's Horse and the story collection Dictionary of Modern Anguish. His literary criticism has appeared in Philosophy and Literature, Narrative, The Journal of Beckett Studies and various anthologies.
Lynn Z. Bloom, Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor and Aetna Chair of Writing at the University of Connecticut, has published numerous personal/academic essays, including "(Im)Patient" (2005) and "Voices" (2004), many collected in Composition Studies as a Creative Art (1999).
Marc Bousquet is the author or editor of three books: How the University Works: Higher Education and the Low-Wage Nation (forthcoming), Tenured Bosses and Disposable Teachers (2004), and The Politics of Information (2004). He is a member of the AAUP national Council (2005-2007) and an associate professor of English at Santa Clara University.
Terry Caesar is formerly Professor of English at Clarion University and Professor of American Literature at Mukogawa University (Japan). He continues to teach as an adjunct in the San Antonio area, and his "Purely Academic" column appears monthly in Inside Higher Education.
Nancy Cirillo is Associate Professor emeritus, English, at the University of Illinois at Chicago and is currently writing about representations of the Holocaust in postcolonial, especially Caribbean, literature.
Luca Crispi is James Joyce Research Fellow at the National Library of Ireland. He co-curated their multimedia Ulysses exhibition featuring over a dozen newly uncovered manuscripts; it runs from June 2004 to April 2006.
Jane Danielewicz is Associate Professor of English at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She is the author of Teaching Selves: Identity, Pedagogy, and Teacher Education (2001).
Jeffrey R. Di Leo is Interim Dean of Arts and Sciences at the University of Houston-Victoria. He is editor and founder of the journal symplokē, and series editor for Class in America published by the University of Nebraska Press. His most recent book is From Socrates to Cinema: An Introduction to Philosophy (2006).
David B. Downing isauthor of The Knowledge Contract: Politics and Paradigms in the Academic Workplace (2005), and he edits the journal Work and Days. [End Page 382]
Laurie Finke is Professor and Director of Women's and Gender Studies at Kenyon College. She is one of the editors of The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism.
John Burt Foster, Jr. is Professor of English and Cultural Studies at George Mason University. A past editor of The Comparatist, he has written books on Nietzsche and the novel and on Nabokov and modernism.
Judith Kegan Gardiner teaches at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She's a member of the editorial collective for the journal Feminist Studies and publishes on feminist theory, masculinity, writing by women, and popular culture.
John McGowan isProfessor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. His latest book is Democracy's Children: Intellectuals and the Rise of Cultural Politics (2002).
Hassan Melehy has written extensively on Renaissance French and English literature, and more broadly on early modern literature and philosophy. His research also extends into contemporary critical theory and cinema studies.
Dorothea Olkowski is Professor of Philosophy and former Director of Women's Studies at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. Most recently she has authored Gilles Deleuze and the Ruin of Representation (1999) and The Universal (In...

pdf