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  • Contributors

Frida Beckman is a research fellow at Uppsala University, Sweden. Her research centers on Deleuze's philosophy, focusing on topics such as sexuality, history, and temporality as expressed through various media: literature, cinema, and television. She is the editor of Deleuze and Sex (EUP), and co-editor of Shadows of Cruelty, two special issues of Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript on sexuality and Deleuze.

Katey Castellano is Assistant Professor of English at James Madison University. A specialist in British Romanticism, she has published essays on Edmund Burke, William Blake, Mary Shelley, and John Keats. She is completing a book-length project on the connection between Romantic conservatism and environmental conservation.

Graham Harman is Associate Provost for Research Administration at the American University in Cairo. He is the author of numerous books, most recently The Quadruple Object and Quentin Meillassoux: Philosophy in the Making.

Alison James is Assistant Professor of French at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include the Oulipo group, experimental poetics, representations of the everyday, and the connections between literature and philosophy. Her book Constraining Chance: Georges Perec and the Oulipo was published by Northwestern University Press in 2009, and she has edited a special issue of L'Esprit Créateur on literary formalisms (Summer 2008). She has also written articles on Aragon, Jacques Roubaud, Harry Mathews, and the philosopher Clément Rosset.

David Lane completed his PhD in Continental Philosophy at Monash University, Melbourne, last year. His doctoral thesis is entitled In the Name of Nietzsche: Deleuze and the Aesthetic Dimension of Thought (2010). His research interests include aesthetics, contemporary European philosophy, and in particular the work of Nietzsche, Deleuze, Rancière, Badiou and Lacoue-Labarthe.

Éric Méchoulan teaches at the Université de Montréal. He has recently published La culture de la mémoire, ou comment se débarrasser du passé? (2008), D'où nous viennent nos idées? Métaphysique et intermédialité (2010), and La crise du discours économique (2011). [End Page 159]

Kieran Murphy teaches in the Department of French and Italian at Dartmouth College. He has published previously in artUS, Épistémocritique, and Contemporary French and Francophone Studies/Sites. He has recently completed the manuscript of his first book, "MRI of Modernity."

Cory Stockwell earned his doctorate in the Comparative Literature Program at the University of Minnesota in 2010, and is currently a Teaching Fellow in the Foundation Year Programme at the University of King's College, Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is working on a book manuscript dealing with the nexus of secrecy, violence and community in the work of Kant, Sade, Duras, Lispector and Bolaño. [End Page 160]

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