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  • Notes on Contributors

Leland de la Durantaye is the Gardner Cowles Associate Professor of English at Harvard University. He is the author of Style is Matter: The Moral Art of Vladimir Nabokov (2007) and Giorgio Agamben: A Critical Introduction (2009).

David Fallon is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at St Anne's College, Oxford, working on literary sociability in booksellers' shops of the Romantic period. With Jon Mee, he co-edited Revolution and Romanticism: A Reader (Blackwell, forthcoming, 2011).

Peter Fifield is a junior research fellow at St John's College, Oxford, where he is working on the anti-literary in Beckett, Levinas, Bataille and Blanchot.

James Harmer is a research fellow at St John's College, Cambridge. He has published on a variety of topics in Renaissance Literature and is currently preparing a book about the characterisation of linguistic thought in writing of this period.

Noam Reisner is a lecturer at the Department of English and American Studies at Tel Aviv University. He is author of Milton and the Ineffable (Oxford, 2009).

Anne Stillman works on T. S. Eliot and teaches English at Clare College, Cambridge.

Alexander Wong is a graduate of Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he read English and is now pursuing graduate studies in Renaissance Literature. His focus is on seventeenth-century religious verse, and the relationship between semiotics and ritual(ist) practice. [End Page 399]

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