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  • Contributors

Laura E. Thomason, assistant professor of English at Macon State College, is currently working on a study of Sarah Scott’s The Test of Filial Duty.

John C. O’Neal is professor of French at Hamilton College; he is the author of Changing Minds: The Shifting Perception of Culture in Eighteenth-Century France (2002).

Meghan L. Burke is a PhD candidate at The Ohio State University; her current research interests lie in Romantic-era women’s autobiographical writing.

William N. Coker is a PhD candidate at Yale University currently working as an instructor at Bilkent University, Turkey; his research focuses on comparative Romanticism and intellectual history. His dissertation is entitled, “A World in Disguise: Jean Paul and the Two-Fold Project of Romantic Mimesis.”

Nancy E. Johnson is an associate professor in the Department of English at the State University of New York at New Paltz. She is the author of The English Jacobin Novel on Rights, Property and the Law: Critiquing the Contract (2004) and editor of an edition of Frances Burney’s court journals from 1790– 91 (2010).

Ailsa Kay is a PhD candidate at McMaster University; she is working on political and literary rhetorics of shame in eighteenthcentury Britain.

Sara Salih, University of Toronto, is currently writing a book on brown people in Britain and Jamaica from the Abolition era onward.

Robbie Richardson is a PhD candidate in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University.

Jean Viviès est professeur de littérature britannique a l’Université de Provence Aix-Marseille 1; il est notamment l’auteur de English Travel Narratives in the Eighteenth-Century: Exploring Genres (2002).

Ruth Abbott is a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge; her current research focuses on William Wordsworth, and she teaches courses on the literature of the long eighteenth century.

Alan Bewell is professor of English at the University of Toronto.

Andrea Charise is a PhD candidate in the Department of English at the University of Toronto. [End Page iii]

Elspeth Jajdelska, University of Strathclyde, is the author of Silent Reading and the Birth of the Narrator (2007), and she is currently working on oral reading, oratory, and conversation in the eighteenth century.

Anne Coudreuse est maître de conférences a l’Université Paris 13 et membre de l’Institut universitaire de France.

Claire Jaquier est professeur de littérature française a l’Université de Neuchâtel; elle a publié L’Erreur des désirs: Roman sensibles au xviii e siècle (1998).

Leonard D. Schwarz, a Reader (associate professor) in the Modern History Department, Birmingham University, has published on eighteenth-century servants and is currently researching eighteenth-century towns, particularly London.

Catherine Dubeau est spécialiste de la littérature française du xviiie siècle et professeure adjointe au département d’études française de l’Université de Waterloo.

Devoney Looser is associate professor of English at the University of Missouri; she is the author of Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750–1850 (2008).

Felicia B. Sturzer is professor of French at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She has published articles on Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni, Julie de Lespinasse, and Marivaux; she is currently working on the fairy tales of Mme d’Aulnoy.

Norbert Sclippa, professeur de français au College of Charleston, est spécialiste de la littérature française du xviiie siècle et l’auteur de Pour Sade (2006).

Cecil Patrick Courtney, fellow of Christ’s College, Cambridge, is the author of numerous publications on Isabelle de Charrière, including Isabelle de Charrière (Belle de Zuylen): A Biography (1993), and he is the general editor of the Correspondence générale of Benjamin Constant (1993– ).

Lisa Vargo, associate professor of English at the University of Saskatchewan, has produced editions and essays on women writers, including Anna Barbauld and Mary Shelley.

Izabella Zatorska, professeur à l’Université de Varsovie, est une spécialiste de la littérature française du xviiie siècle. [End Page iv]

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