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  • Contributors

Kenneth Bilby is a Research Associate in the Department of Anthropology at the Smithsonian Institution. He is the author of True-Born Maroons (University Press of Florida, 2005), winner in 2006 of the Wesley-Logan Prize, awarded by the American Historical Association for an outstanding book on African Diaspora history. His most recent book (co-authored with Jerome S. Handler) is Enacting Power: The Criminalization of Obeah in the Anglophone Caribbean, 1760–2011 (University of the West Indies Press, in press). (kmbilby@gmail.com)

Leora Bilsky is Professor of Law at Tel Aviv University. She is the author of Transformative Justice: Israeli Identity on Trial (Michigan University Press, 2003). Her main areas of research are law after the Holocaust, political trials, international criminal law, civil liability for atrocity, and feminist legal theory. She is currently working on a book-length project on corporate responsibility for involvement in the Nazi crimes, focusing on the Holocaust restitution litigation of the 1990s. (bilskyl@post.tau.ac.il)

Rosario Forlenza is a Postdoctoral Visiting Scholar at the Center for European and Mediterranean Studies, New York University. He is a historian whose main fields of expertise are political anthropology, memory studies, symbolic and cultural politics, cinema and propaganda, democracy (comparative and theory) and authoritarianism. (rf1231@nyu.edu)

Beate Müller is Reader in Modern German Studies at Newcastle University, United Kingdom. She is the author of Stasi—Zensur—Machtdiskurse: Publikationsgeschichten und Materialien zu Jurek Beckers Werk (Niemeyer, 2006) and editor of Censorship and Cultural Regulation in the Modern Age (Rodopi, 2004) and Zensur im modernen deutschen Kulturraum (Niemeyer, 2003). She is currently working on early postwar child Holocaust [End Page 196] testimonies as well as on a larger project on the role of the child in literary and non-literary depictions of the Holocaust. (beate.muller@ncl.ac.uk)

Victoria E. Thompson is Associate Professor of History at Arizona State University. She is the author of The Virtuous Marketplace: Women and Men, Money and Politics in Paris, 1830–1870 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000) and Women in Nineteenth-Century Europe, co-authored with Rachel Fuchs (Palgrave, 2004). She is currently completing a book manuscript entitled, “Inventing Public Space: The Parisian Royal Plaza in the Era of the French Revolution.” (victoria.thompson@asu.edu) [End Page 197]

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