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  • The Contributors

Russell Sbriglia is a Ph.D. candidate in English at the University of Rochester. His dissertation, "The Politics of Pyrrhonism: Skepticism, Slavery, and Conservatism in the American Renaissance," explores counternarratives to the liberal tradition both within and without the canon of classic American literature.

Jessica Lang is Assistant Professor of English at Baruch College, City University of New York. Her current project focuses on modalities of reading, relating and listening in nineteenth-century American literature.

Ryan Burt is a lecturer in English and Comparative History of Ideas at the University of Washington. His current book project examines early twentieth-century Lakota and Dakota autobiography in relation to the Dawes Act and the "Indian New Deal."

Julianne Newmark, an Assistant Professor of English at New Mexico Tech, recently completed the book manuscript, "Place, Not Race: Sites of American Literary Neonativism, 1899-1933." She has published on D. H. Lawrence, John Collier, Zitkala-Sa, and Mario Vargas Llosa and is at work on a book about Native American activist writers.

Keith Wilhite is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Thompson Writing Program at Duke University and has published in ELH, Prose Studies, and Studies in American Fiction. He is completing work on his book, Suburban Outposts: U.S. Literature and the Ends of Regionalism.

Phillip E. Wegner is a University Research Foundation Professor and Graduate Coordinator in the Department of English at University of Florida. He is author of Imaginary Communities and Life Between Two Deaths, 1989-2001. [End Page 169]

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