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  • Contributors

Dario Del Puppo is Professor of Language and Culture Studies at Trinity College, Hartford. His research deals primarily with the manuscripts and early printed books of Medieval and Renaissance Italian literature and, more broadly, with popular and material culture of Italy from the fourteenth to the sixteenth century. Email: Dario.DelPuppo@trincoll.edu.

Ronald Broude is the principal of the music publisher Broude Brothers Limited and the founding trustee of the non-profit Broude Trust for the Publication of Musicological Editions. He is a member of the STS Executive Committee, and served as Executive Director of the STS from 2004 to 2005. In 2009, he was awarded the Association for Documentary Editing’s Boydston Prize for his article on the Gilbert and Sullivan Critical Edition published in Volume 3.2 of Textual Cultures. Email: broudebrothers@verizon.net.

Meg Roland is Associate Professor of English and Department Chair at Marylhurst University where she has collaborated on the development of the new Text:Image concentration, which explores the intersection of textuality and visual studies, and a new online degree in English and Digital Humanities. She has forthcoming essays in Mapping Medieval Geographies (ed. Keith Lilley) and the journal Arthuriana. She is completing a book, After Poets and Astronomers: Literature, Maps, and Geography in Late Medieval and Early Modern England. A graduate of the University of Washington’s Textual Studies program, she teaches courses in medieval literature as well as literature and cartography. Email: mroland@marylhurst.edu.

Marta Werner is Professor of English at D’Youville College. A former co-chair of the MLA’s Committee on Scholarly Editions, she is a founding member of the Dickinson Electronic Archives 2. Werner is author/editor of Emily Dickinson’s Open Folios: Scenes of Reading, Surfaces of Writing; Radical Scatters: An Electronic Archive of Emily Dickinson’s Late Fragments; and Hannah Weiner’s The Book of Revelations; and co-author, with Nick Lawrence, of Ordinary Mysteries: The Common Journal of Nathaniel and Sophia [End Page 166] Hawthorne. Her new research interest concerns late style in poetry, criticism, and editing. Email: wernerm@dyc.edu.

Robin Shulze is Professor of English at the University of Delaware. She is the author of The Web of Friendship: Marianne Moore and Wallace Stevens (University of Michigan, 1995), and the editor of Becoming Marianne Moore: The Early Poems, 1907–1924 (University of California Press, 2002). Her most recent book, The Degenerate Muse: American Nature, Modernist Poetry, and the Problem of Cultural Hygiene, is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. She is the co-editor, with Linda Leavell and Cristanne Miller, of Critics and Poets on Marianne Moore: “A Right Good Salvo of Barks” (Bucknell, 2005) and 1914–1945 Period Editor of the Pearson Custom Library of American Literature, the first “print on demand” anthology of American Literature to market. She is currently a member of the MLA Committee on Scholarly Editions, and serves on the editorial board of Modernism/Modernity. Email: rschulze@udel.edu.

George Bornstein is C. A. Patrides Professor of Literature, Emeritus, at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. The author and editor of twenty volumes on modernist literature, he has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, and American Council of Learned Societies, among others, and is a past president of the Society for Textual Scholarship. His two most recent books are The Colors of Zion: Blacks, Jews, and Irish From 1845 to 1945 (Harvard) and W. B. Yeats: The Winding Stair and Other Poems: a Facsimile Edition, discussed in the present essay. Email: georgeb@umich.edu.

James L. W. West iii is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English at Penn State University and the immediate past president of the Society. He is a biographer, book historian, and scholarly editor. His new edition of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender Is the Night will appear in June 2012. Email: jlw14@psu.edu.

Matt Cohen is Associate Professor in the Department of English and a member of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin. The author of The Networked Wilderness: Communicating in Early New England (Minnesota, 2010) and the editor of Brother Men: The Correspondence of Edgar Rice Burroughs...

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