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  • Notes on Contributors

Sarah Annes Brown teaches at Anglia Ruskin University. She has published widely on the reception of Ovid and the afterlives of Shakespeare's plays, and she is currently completing a monograph on the relationship between allusion and the uncanny for Manchester University Press, and co-editing (with Andrew Taylor) two volumes on Ovid for the new MHRA Tudor and Stuarts Translations series.

Xavier Buxton read English at Peterhouse, Cambridge. He currently works in a bar. He hopes, one day, to teach Sappho to schoolchildren.

Aisling Byrne is Fitzjames Research Fellow in Old and Middle English at Merton College, Oxford.

Bert Cardullo is Professor of Media and Communication at the Izmir University of Economics in Turkey. He has published numerous books, among them World Directors in Dialogue and André Bazin and Italian Neorealism.

Alice Kelly is an AHRC-funded third-year PhD student in English at the University of Cambridge. Her doctoral project examines representations of death in modernist women's writing during and after World War One.

Erik Martiny teaches Anglophone literature and film in Paris. He has published articles on poetry and fiction in The Wallace Stevens Journal, The Cambridge Quarterly, English Studies (Routledge) and many other periodicals. He has also written on the connections between film and fiction, having recently edited a volume of essays for Sedes/Armand Colin (Lolita: From Nabokov to Kubrick and Lyne), as well as a personal book on the poetics of filiation: Intertextualité et filiation paternelle dans la poésie anglophone (L'Harmattan). He is currently editing 'A Companion to Poetic Genre' for Wiley-Blackwell.

Christopher Mole is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Attention is Cognitive Unison: An Essay in Philosophical Psychology (OUP 2011).

Harriet Phillips is a PhD student at Queens' College, Cambridge, working on the uses of popular tradition in early modern literature.

Anne Stillman works on T. S. Eliot and teaches English at Clare College, Cambridge. [End Page 401]

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