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Diaspora 6:3 1997 Notes on Contributors Laura Chrisman is Visiting Assistant Professor ofModem Culture and Media at Brown University and Lecturer in the School of African and Asian Studies at the University of Sussex in Britain. She has also been a Visiting Professor and Research Fellow at the Universities ofWitwatersrand and Cape Town in South Africa. She is the author of some twenty articles, of the forthcoming book Empire and Opposition: South Africa and Imperial Culture (Oxford UP), and co-editor, with Patrick Williams, ofColonial Discourse and Post-Colonial Theory: A Reader (Columbia UP and Harvester Wheatsheaf UK, 1993). Carole Fabricant is Professor of English at the University of California-Riverside. She is the author ofSwift's Landscape (Johns Hopkins UP, 1982; rpt. U of Notre Dame P, 1995) and of some twenty articles and book chapters, including 'Speaking for the Irish Nation: The Drapier, the Bishop, and the Problems of Colonial Representation' (forthcoming in ELH) and 'The Literature of Domestic Tourism and the Public Consumption ofPrivate Property.' Gregory F. Goekjian is Professor of English at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon. He has been a Visiting Professor at Yerevan State University in Armenia and at the West Sussex Institute of Higher Education in Britain. He is the author of articles on Milton, on Derrida, and on genocide. His 'Genocide and Historical Desire' (Semiótica, 1991) will soon appear in German translation in History and Memory (Berlin: Verlag Leske & Budrich, 1999). Barbara Harlow is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Texas-Austin. She has also taught at the American University of Cairo, University College-Galway, University of Natal—Pietermaritzburg, and Wesleyan University. She is the co-editor, with Mia Carter, ofImperialism and Orientalism : A Documentary Sourcebook (Blackwell, 1999) and author of After Lives (Verso 1996), Barred (Wesleyan UP, 1992), Resistance Literature (Methuen 1987), and many articles on cultural politics, resistance movements, Palestinian literature, and Third World literature. Diaspora 6:3 1997 Anastasia N. Panagakos is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at the University of California-Santa Barbara, where she is completing a dissertation on the Greek diaspora. She is the author of the forthcoming "The Feminist Classroom as Community in Voices: The Newsletter ofthe Association for Feminist Anthropology and of several manuscripts on the Greek Orthodox Church and the return migration of Greek Canadians to Greece. 114 ...

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