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  • Contributors

Katherine Acheson is Associate Professor of English at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. She is the editor of The Memoir of 1603 and the Diary of 1616–1619 by Anne Clifford (2006), and the author of articles on Clifford, Shakespeare, and Milton. She is presently working on a book about visual rhetoric and early modern English print culture, and articles related to this project are forthcoming in English Literary Renaissance and British Printed Images: Essays in Interpretation. koa@uwaterloo.ca

Dianne Berrett Brown holds a Ph.D. in Romance Languages and Literatures from Harvard University. She is an independent scholar and editor who has recently published studies of Rousseau, Mercier, and Fénelon. She is completing a book manuscript, Private Lessons: Enlightenment Education and the Eighteenth-Century French Novel. diane.brown@post.harvard.edu

Darryl P. Domingo completed his Ph.D. in English at the University of Toronto, where he is teaching courses in eighteenth-century literature and culture. He has worked on topics ranging from puppetry and parentheses to pedantry and print culture and has published research on the relationship between Augustan satire and early modern theories of collecting; on the satiric jeu d'esprit of the Scriblerians; and on early attitudes toward British literary history. He is completing a book manuscript provisionally titled Unbending the Mind: The Rhetoric of Diversion in English Literature and Culture, 1690–1760. darryl.domingo@utoronto.ca [End Page 159]

Anca Munteanu is Associate Professor of English and Director of Gender and Women's Studies at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, NY. She earned a Ph.D. at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and has published in the field of British Romantic Literature on William Blake, Mary Shelley, and other Romantic writers. She is currently working on a book on Mary Robinson. munteanu@lemoyne.edu

Ingrid Ranum is Assistant Professor in the Departments of English and Women's and Gender Studies at Gonzaga University. She has published articles on gender construction and domestic ideology in the poetry of Alfred Lord Tennyson and Matthew Arnold. ranum@gonzaga.edu

Angela Rehbein is a Ph.D. candidate in English at the University of Missouri studying British literature of the long eighteenth century. Her broader research interests include women writers, the British empire, and postcolonial literature and theory. rehbeinam@missouri.edu

Ellen R. Welch is Assistant Professor of French in the Romance Languages and Literatures Department at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She is completing a book tentatively titled Cosmopolitan Fictions: Worldly Desires and Literary Pleasures in Early Modern France. erwelch@email.unc.edu [End Page 160]

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