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  • Contributors

José David Lebovitch Dahl is a graduate student at the University of Copenhagen. He previously studied at the University of Bologna, holding a Danish state grant, and at the University of Rome III, holding an EU Socrates grant (1995–1999).

David Forman-Barzilai is a Visiting Professor at the University of California, San Diego, where he is teaching courses in political philosophy and Judaic Studies. Among his most recent publications are Homo Dialogicus: Martin Buber’s Contributions to Philosophy (in Hebrew) (2000) and “Homo Dialogicus: Martin Buber’s Existential Phenomenology of the Human,” in The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy, Vol. 8 (1998), pp. 55–66.

Sander L. Gilman is a Distinguished Professor of the Liberal Arts and Medicine at the University of Illinois in Chicago and the Director of the Humanities Laboratory, and he was recently appointed the first Director of the Jewish Studies Program there. A cultural and literary historian, he is the author or editor of over sixty books. His most recent monograph Jurek Becker: Die Biographie appeared in 2002.

David Hartman is the founder and Director of the Shalom Hartman Institute. He received his rabbinical ordination from Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik of Yeshiva University, New York, and his Ph.D. in Philosophy from McGill University, Montreal. His most recent publications are of Israelis and the Jewish Tradition: An Ancient People Debating Its Future (2000) and Love and Terror in the God Encounter: The Theological Legacy of Joseph B. Soloveitchik (2001).

Frederick A. Lubich is Professor of German and Chair of the Department at Old Dominion University. He is the author of Die Dialektik von Logos und Eros im Werk von Thomas Mann (1986) and Max Frischs “Stiller,” “Homo Faber” und Mein Name sei Gantenbein—Modellanalysen zur deutschenLiterature (1990), and he edited Thomas Mann—Death in Venice, Tonio Kroger and Other Writings. [End Page 209]

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