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  • Contributors

Mark Cronlund Anderson is Associate Professor of History at the University of Regina as well as Coordinator of Interdisciplinary Studies at Luther College, University of Regina. He has published three books, including Pancho Villa’s Revolution by Headlines (Oklahoma, 2001). He is presently completing a study that examines and assesses the ways in which Hollywood film has served to promote Manifest Destiny.

Geneviève Fortin est étudiante en doctorat à la State University of New York–Albany. Spécialiste en littérature, elle écrit une thèse sur le féminisme de Rachilde et de Laure Conan, deux femmes écrivains de la fin du dix-neuvième siècle. Elle travaille également sur le projet de recherche «A Sociolinguistic Investigation of Franco-American French», sous la direction de la professeure Cynthia Fox, depuis trois ans.

Cynthia Fox est professeure agrégée dans le Département de langues, littératures et cultures de la State University of New York–Albany où elle enseigne les cours de linguistique et de sociolinguistique françaises. Elle est co-directrice, avec la professeure Jane Smith de l’Université de Maine, du projet de recherche «A Sociolinguistic Investigation of Franco-American French», subventionné par la National Science Foundation (BCS-0003942 et BCS-0004039).

Bernard Lemelin is a Professor in the Department of History at Laval University and a specialist in the contemporary history of US politics and foreign policy. His research focuses mostly on the Truman–Eisenhower era. His articles have been published in the Journal of Illinois History, Études internationales, Great Plains Quarterly, the New England Journal of History, La Revue française d’études américaines, the Bulletin d’histoire politique and the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Newsletter, among others.

Véronique Martin est étudiante en doctorat d’études françaises à la State University of New York–Albany. Elle concentre ses recherches sur l’acquisition de la compétence pragmatique d’étudiants anglophones en classe de français de niveau intermédiaire. Elle a également travaillé avec la professeure Cynthia Fox sur le projet de recherche «A Sociolinguistic Investigation of Franco-American French», subventionné par la National Science Foundation.

Brian Norman is Assistant Professor of English and Co-Director of Women’s Studies at Idaho State University, where he specializes in twentieth-century American literature, with an emphasis on African American and multi-ethnic US literatures. His book, Addressing Division: The American Protest Essay and National Belonging, is forthcoming from the State University of New York Press. He is beginning a project on neo-segregation narratives and co-guest-editing a special issue of African American Review on “Representing Segregation,” forthcoming in spring 2008.

David Hoogland Noon is an Assistant Professor of history at the University of Alaska Southeast, where he teaches all areas of American history. He has published articles on the history of child science in the US, as well as other works on politics and historical memory. [End Page 1] He is currently working on a project about the conservative uses of history since the end of the cold war.

Kathy M’Closkey is an Adjunct Associate Professor and freelance curator in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Windsor. She is the author of Swept under the Rug: A Hidden History of Navajo Weaving (2002), University of New Mexico Press, and the forthcoming Double Jeopardy: Navajo Weavers, Reservation Traders and the Spectre of Free Trade. She curated Threads of Time: Eldon House Embroideries for the London (Ontario) Art Gallery in 1999.

Louis Stelling est étudiant en doctorat à la State University of New York–Albany. Il travaille sur le projet de recherche «A Sociolinguistic Investigation of Franco-American French», sous la direction de la professeure Cynthia Fox. Sociolinguiste, il rédige une thèse sur le transfert à l’anglais et la variation morphosyntaxique dans les communautés francoaméricaines de Woonsocket (Rhode Island) et de Southbridge (Massachusetts). [End Page 2]

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