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  • Contributors

Ekaterina V. Haskins is Associate Professor of Rhetoric at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA. She is the author of Logos and Power in Isocrates and Aristotle (University of South Carolina Press, 2004). She has published numerous articles and essays on the history of rhetoric, visual culture and public memory. (haskie@rpi.edu)

Christian Jouhaud is Professor (directeur d’études) at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris and Director of Research at the CNRS. His books include Mazarinades: La Fronde des mots (Aubier, 1985) (to be republished in 2009); La main de Richelieu ou le pouvoir cardinal (Gallimard, 1991); Les Pouvoirs de la littérature: Histoire d’un paradoxe (Gallimard, 2000); and Sauver le Grand-Siècle? Présence et transmission du passé (Le Seuil, 2007). (Christian.Jouhaud@ehess.fr)

Dori Laub is currently a practicing psychoanalyst in New Haven, Connecticut, who works primarily with victims of massive psychic trauma and with their children. He is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine and co-founder of the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies. He has published on the topic of psychic trauma, its knowing and representation, in a variety of psychoanalytic journals and is the co-author, with Shoshana Felman, of Testimony: Crises of Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis, and History (Routledge, 1992). (laub37@optonline.net)

Jonathan Porter is Professor of History at the University of New Mexico, where he has taught Chinese and Asian history since 1969. He is the author of several books, including Tseng Kuofan’s Private Bureaucracy (University of California Press, 1972); All Under Heaven: The Chinese [End Page 151] World (with Eliot Porter) (Pantheon Books, 1983); and Macau: The Imaginary City (Westview, 1996). (jporter@unm.edu)

Zheng Wang is an Assistant Professor at Seton Hall University’s John C. Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Relations. His current research interests include cross-cultural negotiation and conflict resolution, historical memory and intergroup conflict. He has published book chapters and journal articles in various publications. (wangzhen@shu.edu)

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