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  • Notes on Contributors

Matthew Campbell is Reader in English at the University of Sheffield and editor of the Cambridge Companion to Contemporary Irish Poetry.

David Ellis is an emeritus professor of English at the University of Kent. His latest publications are Shakespeare's Practical Jokes (Bucknell University Press, 2007) and Death and the author: how D. H. Lawrence died, and was remembered (Oxford University Press, 2008).

Dominic Gavin is a PhD student of cinema at New York University, with an undergraduate degree in English Literature.

James Hodkinson is Assistant Professor in German Studies at Warwick University. He is a specialist in the thought and literature of German Romanticism. In particular, he has published on the representation of gender and ethnic difference in the period, most recently in the form of a monograph Woman and Writing in the Works of Novalis. Transformation beyond Measure? (Camden House, 2007). His current focus is literary representations of German-Islamic encounters in nineteenth-century German literature, on which he is co-editing a volume of essays.

Irene Hsiao is a PhD candidate at the University of Chicago, working on melancholic repetition and the romantic lyric.

Michael Hurley is a Fellow of Robinson College, Cambridge where he is Director of Studies in English. He teaches post-1830s literature, theories of versification and the function of criticism.

Tom Sperlinger is Director of Lifelong Learning for English at the University of Bristol.

Anne Stillman teaches English at Clare College, Cambridge.

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