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  • Notes on Contributors

Shannan Clark is an Assistant Professor of History at Montclair State University. His forthcoming book, The Creative Class: White-Collar Workers and the Making of America's Culture of Consumer Capitalism, will be published in 2012 by Oxford University Press.

Kristin L. Matthews is an associate professor of American literature and incoming director of the American Studies Program at Brigham Young University. Her current book project examines the politics of reading in Cold War American literature and culture, and her writings have appeared in Arizona Quarterly, Modern Drama, The Journal of American Culture, The Journal of Popular Culture, International Journal of Comic Arts, African American Review, and the recent book Pressing the Fight: Print, Propaganda, and the Cold War (Umass Press 2010).

Judy Rohrer is currently a scholar in residence with the Beatrice Bain Research Group at UC Berkeley. Her book, Haoles in Hawai'i, was released in 2010 by the University of Hawai'i Press.

Matthew Schneider-Mayerson is completing his dissertation about the "peak oil" movement, online communities, and conservatism in contemporary American political culture in the American Studies department at the University of Minnesota. He has published articles on race in professional sports, Dan Brown and 9/11 popular culture, and the study of popular fiction, and teaches courses on American popular culture and politics.

Neil L. York is a professor of history and Mary Lou Fulton Professor at Brigham Young University. His most recent book is The Boston Massacre: A History with Documents (Routledge); his most recent article is "Imperial Impotence: Treason in 1774 Massachusetts," which will appear soon in the Law and History Review. He is finishing an essay where he compares the British dispatch of troops to Boston in 1768 with the 2003 American incursion into Iraq. [End Page 4]

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