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Notes on Contributors Notes on Contributors Enda Duffy is Associate Professor of English at UC-Santa Barbara. He is the author of The Subaltern Ulysses (University of Minnesota Press, 1995) and ofarticles such as "The Japanese Car as Postcolonial Novel" (College Literature, 1995); "Interesting States," in Joyce and Gender, Ed. Kimberly Devlin (U of Texas P, forthcoming 1997); and co-author, with Maurizia Boscagli, of "Joyce's Face," Marketing Modernisms, Ed. Kevin Dettmar (U ofMichigan P, 1996). He is currently working on a book about speed, space, architecture, and geopolitics in the early-twentieth century. Wesley Chapin is Instructor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. His book, Germany for the Germans? The Political Effects ofInternational Migration is forthcoming from Greenwood Press, 1997. He is the author of several forthcoming articles, among them "Explaining the Electoral Success of the New Right," West European Politics (April 1997); and "Auslaender raus? The Empirical Relationship between Immigration and Crime," Social Science Quarterly (June 1997). David Ip is Senior Lecturer and a director of the Masters Program in Social Planning and Development in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Queensland, Australia. He is co-author, with Constance Lever-Tracy, of Asian Entrepreneurs in Australia: Ethnic Small Business in the Chinese and Indian Communities of Brisbane and Sydney (OMA/AGPS, 1991); Asian Impressions of Multicultural Australia (1994); and with Noel Tracy and Constance Lever-Tracy, of The Chinese Diaspora and Mainland China:An Emerging Economic Synergy (St. Martin's, 1996). Anahid Kassabian is Assistant Professor of Communication and Media Studies at Fordham University in Manhattan. She is the author of Tracking Identities: Hollywoood Film Music of the '80s and '90s (Duke UP, forthcoming 1997); and co-editor, with David Schwarz and Lawrence Siegel, of Keeping the Score: Music, Disciplinarity, Culture (U of Virginia P, forthcoming 1997). She has contributed chapters to several books, such as "Feminist Theory and The Study of Popular Music" (Popular Music Perspectives, vol. 5, 1995); and 334 Diaspora 5:2 1996 has co-authored with David Kazanjian articles on the Armenian Diaspora, such as "Naming the Armenian Genocide" (new formations 8, 1989) and "Tou Have to Want to be an Armenian Here,'" Armenian Review, forthcoming 1997. David Kazanjian is finishing his PhD in the Department of Rhetoric at UC-Berkeley, with a dissertation on "Statist Knowledges and Nationalist Desires: Figuring the Imperial US Citizen before the Civil War." He is the author of seven articles, including "Notarizing Knowledge: Paranoia and Civility in Freud and Lacan" (Qui Parle, 1993); "Race, Nation, and the Genealogy of US Mercantilism," forthcoming in Post-Nationalist American Studies, Ed. John Carlos Rowe; and "Naming the Armenian Genocide," coauthored with Anahid Kassabian and reprinted in Space and Place: Theories of Identity and Location, Ed. James Donald et al., published by Lawrence and Wishart. Brij LaI is Senior Fellow in Pacific History at the Australian National University. He was born in Fiji, received his BA from the University of the South Pacific, his MA from the University of British Columbia, and his PhD in History from the Australian National University. He taught History at the Universities of the South Pacific, Papua New Guinea and Hawaii at Manoa before joining the ANU. He is the author of Girmitiyas: The Origin of the Fiji Indians (Canberra, 1983); Power and Prejudice: The Making of the Fiji Crisis (Wellington, NZ, 1988); Broken Waves: A History ofthe Fiji Islands in the Twentieth Century (Honolulu, 1992); and A Vision for Change: A.D. Patel and the Politics ofFiji (Canberra, 1997). He was the founding editor of the prize-winning The Contemporary Pacific: A Journal of Island Affairs, and currently edits The Journal of Pacific History. Dr. LaI was the Fiji Indian community's nominee on a three-member Commission to review the Fiji Constitution. The Commission's 800-page report has been hailed internationally as a model for the constitutions of other ethnically-divided societies. His current research includes editing an Encyclopaedia of the Pacific Islands and a general history of Indian indenture in the former British colonies. Constance Lever-Tracy is a senior lecturer in Sociology at the Flinders University of South Australia. She is the co-author of...

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