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  • Contributors

Helga L. Duncan is Assistant Professor of English at Stonehill College in Easton, MA, where she teaches Shakespeare and courses in early modern literature and culture. The essay on Titus Andronicus comes out of a book project—tentatively entitled "Representing Sacred Space in Early Modern English Literature, 1580–1690"—that examines the impact of the transformation and loss of traditional sacred sites on the spatial and literary imagination in early modern England.

Edward Wheatley is the Edward L. Surtz, S.J. Professor of Medieval Literature at Loyola University, Chicago. His most recent book, Stumbling Blocks Before the Blind: Medieval Constructions of a Disability, is part of the University of Michigan Press series Corporealities: Discourses of Disability.

Cynthia Lewis is Charles A. Dana Professor of English at Davidson College, where she has taught for thirty years. She has published articles on early modern drama in numerous journals and a book, Particular Saints (Associated University Presses, 1997), about characters in Shakespeare's plays named Antonio or Anthony. Much of her scholarly work takes an interdisciplinary approach to stage history. She also writes creative nonfiction, both reported and personal.

Christopher Wixson is an Associate Professor of English and the Director of Composition at Eastern Illinois University, specializing in dramatic literature. He has written on Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Sarah Kane, John Lyly, Harold Pinter, and Elmer Rice. For the stage, he has directed numerous productions, including plays by Edward Albee, Samuel Beckett, Anton Chekhov, Harold Pinter, William Shakespeare, and John Webster. Currently, he is working on a book about Edwardian playwrights. [End Page 543]

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