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CONTRIBUTORS James Brock received his MFA from Indiana University, where he currently is writing a dissertation on Muriel Rukeyser's poetry. His own poems have appeared in many journals, including Carolina Quarterly, College English, and Southern Poetry Review; Artful Dodge and Studies in Short Fiction have published his reviews. He is the editor of Indiana Review. Mildred Greene is Associate Professor of English at Arizona State University. She has degrees from Wellesley, Radcliffe-Harvard, and the University of New Mexico . She has written articles on the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth-century novel, and has translated Madame de Lafayette's Princesse de Clèves, Romance Monographs, Number 35, University, Mississippi, 1979. She is currently working on the works of Jenny P. d'Hericourt, a nineteenth-century French feminist. Gail L. Mortimer is an Associate Professor of English and Director of the Women's Studies Program at the University of Texas at El Paso. She is the author of Faulkner's Rhetoric of Loss: A Study in Perception and Meaning, published in 1983 by the University of Texas Press, and of essays on Jerzy Kosinski and Katherine Anne Porter, as well as Faulkner. Her primary interest is in twentieth-century American fiction, and she is currently at work on a critical study of Eudora Welty. Scott P. Sanders is Director of Professional Writing at the University of New Mexico. His poems have appeared in many journals, and he has published articles on professional and technical writing in The Technical Writing Teacher and the IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication. Tony J. Stafford is Professor of English at the University of Texas at El Paso. His teaching specialization is the field of dramatic literature, from the history of dramatic literature to Shakespeare to modern British and American drama and playwriting. In addition to articles on Shakespeare and other Renaissance playwrights, Shaw and other modern dramatists, he also writes plays and has had professional productions in Denver, Washington, D.C, Houston, Bloomington, and at the Beverly Hills Playhouse in Hollywood, as well as at various community theaters. Robert Ziegler is Associate Professor of Humanities at the Montana College of Mineral Science and Technology. He is the author of a number of studies offin-desi ècle French fiction, including articles, either published or forthcoming, on Octave Mirbeau, Marcel Schwob, Rachilde, and Jean Lorrain. His other essays on Huysmans have, or will, appear in Stanford French Review, West Virginia University Philological Papers, Forum for Modern Language Studies, and Romance Quarterly. 185 ...

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