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  • Notes on Contributors

Martin Haggerty is an independent cultural historian whose work has appeared in a wide range of scholarly and mainstream publications. He is currently engaged in research on William Morris and the English countryside.

Russell Hillier is currently finishing his doctorate on the works of John Milton at Cambridge University. His previous and forthcoming articles may be found in journals that include Modern Language Review, Milton Studies, Milton Quarterly, and Studies in English Literature. He has also had articles published concerning other literary figures such as John Bunyan and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

David Hopkins is Professor of English Literature at the University of Bristol. Among his recent publications are (as co-editor) the Longman Annotated English Poets edition of John Dryden, and Vol. 3 of The Oxford History of Literary Translation in English.

Henry Power is Lecturer in English at the University of Exeter, and is currently writing a book on Henry Fielding.

Peter Robinson is Professor of English and American Literature at the University of Reading. Among his recent books are The Greener Meadow: Selected Poems of Luciano Erba (Princeton, 2007) and The Look of Goodbye: Poems 2001-2006 (Shearsman, 2008).

Debora Van Durme is a doctoral candidate in the English Department of Ghent University (Belgium). Her dissertation examines modernist poetry's involvement with art music and popular music. She has written on music in the oeuvre of Edith Sitwell (Mosaic, June 2008), and is currently researching the connection between Mina Loy's poetry and jazz, and the importance of music in the work of Amy Lowell and other Imagists.

Tom Walker is writing a DPhil thesis at Lincoln College, Oxford, on the the links between Louis MacNeice and the Irish poets of his time. [End Page 374]

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