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  • Contributors

Kenneth Bindas is Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Kent State University. His monographs include The People Remember the South: Oral History and the Depression Era South (University Press of Florida, 2007); Swing, That Modern Sound: The Cultural Context of Swing Music in America, 1935–1947 (University Press of Mississippi, 2001); and All of This Music Belongs to the Nation: The WPA's Federal Music Project and American Society, 1935–1939 (University of Tennessee Press, 1996). (kbindas@kent.edu)

Jovan Byford is a lecturer in Social Psychology at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Open University, United Kingdom. He is the author of Denial and Repression of Antisemitism: Post-Communist Remembrance of the Serbian Bishop Nikolaj Velimirović (CEU Press, 2008) and Teorija zavere: Srbija protiv "novog svetskog poretka" (Conspiracy theory: Serbia vs. the "New World Order") (Beogradski centar za ljudska prava, 2006). He is currently working on a project on Holocaust remembrance in Serbia (details at www.semlin.info). (J.T.Byford@open.ac.uk)

Gregory Carleton is Associate Professor of Russian at Tufts University, and an Associate at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University. He is the author of Sexual Revolution in Bolshevik Russia (Pittsburgh University Press, 2005) and The Politics of Reception: Critical Constructions of Mikhail Zoshchenko (Northwestern University Press, 1998). (greg.carleton@tufts.edu)

Max Clarke is a recent graduate of Northwestern University. His current research interests include social institutions, historical apologetics, and Chinese society and politics. He currently lives and works in New York City. (maxpclarke@gmail.com) [End Page 169]

Gary Alan Fine is John Evans Professor of Sociology at Northwestern University. He is the author of, among others, Difficult Reputations: Collective Memories of the Evil, Inept, and Controversial (University of Chicago Press, 2001). His forthcoming book with William C. Ellis, The Global Grapevine: How Rumors of Terrorism, Immigration, and Trade Matter, will be published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. (g-fine@northwestern.edu)

Natalie Scholz is a lecturer in the History Department of the University of Amsterdam. Her publications include Die imaginierte Restauration: Repräsentationen der Monarchie im Frankreich Ludwigs XVIII (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2006) and the volume Représentation et pouvoir: La politique symbolique en France (1789–1848) (Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2007) (co-edited with Christina Schröer). She is currently working on a project about consumption, material culture and memory in postwar West Germany. (N.Scholz@uva.nl) [End Page 170]

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