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  • Notes on Contributors

Matthew Bevis has published articles on a range of Victorian writers. Most recently, he has edited a collection of essays ‘Some Versions of Empson’ (OUP) to coincide with the centenary of the poet-critic’s birth.

Kirstie Blair is a Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Glasgow. Her primary area of research and publication is Victorian poetry, but she has also published several articles on George Eliot and the scientific content of her novels.

Natalie Ford has recently completed a PhD in English at the University of York, where she held an Overseas Research Students award. Her thesis is entitled The Fate of Reverie: A Study of Scientific and Literary Currencies in Britain, 1830–1870. She has taught undergraduate courses on nineteenth-century British and American literature and is currently finishing a piece on views of trance states in Victorian psychology.

David Gervais is an Honorary Fellow in English at the University of Reading. He has written widely on English and French tragedy and on modern poetry.

Tim Hancock is a Lecturer in English at the University of Ulster. He writes on twentieth century poetry, with a special interest in poets from Ulster and in Mina Loy; he is presently researching academic and popular attitudes towards love poetry.

Adam Rounce is an AHRC Research Fellow at Keele University, helping to edit the Cambridge edition of Jonathan Swift. He is writing a book on literary failure in the eighteenth century.

Tom Sperlinger is Director of Lifelong Learning for English at the University of Bristol. [End Page 1]

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