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  • Contributors

Paul Giles is Challis Professor of English at the University of Sydney, Australia. His most recent books are Transnationalism in Practice: Essays on American Studies, Literature and Religion, and The Global Remapping of American Literature. He is currently chief investigator on an Australian Research Council project titled "Antipodean America: Australasia, Colonialism, and the Constitution of U.S. Literature."

Gary Lee Stonum is Oviatt Professor of English at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of The Dickinson Sublime and Faulkner's Career. He is one of the founding members of the Emily Dickinson International Society and a former editor of the Emily Dickinson Journal.

Mary Loeffelholz is Professor of English and Vice Provost for Academic Affairs at Northeastern University. She is the author of Dickinson and the Boundaries of Feminist Theory and From School to Salon: Reading Nineteenth-Century American Women's Poetry and the editor, with Martha Nell Smith, of Blackwell's Companion to Emily Dickinson. She has edited Studies in American Fiction and is currently the editor of Volume D, 1914-1945, of The Norton Anthology of American Literature.

Páraic Finnerty is Senior Lecturer in English and American Literature at the University of Portsmouth. He is the author of Emily Dickinson's Shakespeare and has published articles on topics ranging from transatlantic literature to terrorism. He is currently working on a monograph titled "Dickinson and Her British Contemporaries: Victorian Poetry in Nineteenth-Century America."

Kathryn Wichelns is Senior Lecturer in Women's Studies at the University of New Mexico. Her work has been published in the Henry James Review.

Michael L. Manson is Professorial Lecturer and Academic Affairs Administrator at American University. He is the author of "The Thews of Hymn: Dickinson's Metrical Grammar," which appears in Blackwell's Companion to Emily Dickinson. He is co-editor of The Calvinist Roots of the Modern Era and is contributing to the forthcoming edition of the Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics.

Martin Griffin is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He is the author of Ashes of the Mind: War and Memory in Northern Literature, 1865-1900. He is currently writing a co-authored book on metaphor and narrative, and is also working on an edited collection of essays titled "American Political Fictions." [End Page 106]

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