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  • Contributors

Michael Goddard is Professor of English, Cultural and Media Studies at the University of Lodz, Poland. He has published on Polish and international cinema, Deleuze's aesthetic theories and radical Italian thought. He is currently preparing a book on the cinema of Raul Ruiz and conducting research into East European postmodern audiovisual cultures.

Seth Graebner is the author of History's Place: Literature and the City in Algerian Writing in French, forthcoming from Lexington Books in May 2007. He is Assistant Professor of French and of International and Area Studies at Washington University in Saint Louis.

Max Henninger (MA, PhD) lives in Berlin and works as a translator. He is the German translator of Italian novelist and poet Nanni Balestrini. His critique of Antonio Negri's theory of post-Fordism is forthcoming in the online journal Ephemera.

Giuseppina Mecchia is Associate Professor of French and Italian at the University, where she also directs the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies. She has published essays on French writers and intellectuals in the context of 19th- and 20th Century politics. She is currently working on a book about late 20th-Century Italian and French leftist political thought.

Timothy S. Murphy, Associate Professor of English at the University of Oklahoma, is the author of Wising Up the Marks: The Amodern William Burroughs (California 1997), co-editor of The Philosophy of Antonio Negri volumes 1 & 2 (Pluto Press 2005 & 2007), and co-translator of Antonio Negri's Subversive Spinoza (Manchester 2004) and Books for Burning (Verso 2005). He has published many essays on contemporary literature and culture as well as translations of writings by Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida and others.

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