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  • Contributors

Dorothy Barenscott recently completed a Social Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellowship with the Cultural Studies Department at Trent University. She is currently a lecturer in Simon Fraser University's School for the Contemporary Arts and working on a book project titled Re-Envisioning Frameworks of Radicality: Modernism, Visual Culture, and the Budapest Avant-Garde. (dorothy.barenscott@shaw.ca)

Zerrin Özlem Biner is a research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle. Her research explores new ethnographic sites for the study of the state in documenting the experiences of minority citizens in post-conflict settings of contemporary Turkey. She is co-editor of The Politics of Victimhood, a special issue of the journal History and Anthropology (2007) and is currently working on a co-edited book on the ethnographies of the juridification of protest. (biner@eth.mpg.de)

Jennifer A. Jordan is Associate Professor of Sociology and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the author of Structures of Memory: Understanding Urban Change in Berlin and Beyond (Stanford University Press, 2006) as well as numerous scholarly articles. Her research and teaching focus on theory, food, culture and collective memory. She is currently writing a book about the heirloom food movement and historical kitchen gardens. (jajordan@uwm.edu)

Tabea Alexa Linhard is Assistant Professor of Spanish at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the author of Fearless Women in the Mexican Revolution and the Spanish Civil War (University of Missouri Press, 2005) and is currently working on a monograph entitled Jewish Spain Today: A Mediterranean Map. (tlinhard@artsci.wustl.edu) [End Page 178]

Shaun O'Dwyer is an instructor in the School of Global Japanese Studies, Meiji University, Tokyo. He has published articles on classical pragmatist philosophy, modern Confucian philosophy and the philosophy of education. His current research is on the philosophy of history. (shaunodwyer@yahoo.com.au)

Bart Ziino is an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow at Deakin University, Victoria, Australia. He is the author of A Distant Grief: Australians, War Graves and the Great War (UWA Press, 2007), and is currently engaged in a history of private life and sentiment in Australia during the First World War. (bart.ziino@deakin.edu.au) [End Page 179]

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