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  • Contributors

Rosalía Baena is Associate Professor of English at the University of Navarra, Spain. Her research interests are life writing and transcultural literatures. Some of her publications are Transculturing Auto/Biography (Routledge) and Tricks with a Glass: Writing Ethnicity in Canada (Rodopi). Her current research is on narrative emotions and illness memoirs.

David Bartine is Associate Professor of English and Graduate Director in the English Department at Binghamton University. His has published Early English Reading Theory: Origins of Current Debates and Reading, Criticism, and Culture: Theory and Teaching in the United States and England, 1820–1950 and essays in Interdisciplinary Literary Studies.

Todd F. Davis is the author of three full-length collections of poetry, most recently The Least of These and Some Heaven, both from Michigan State University Press. He teaches creative writing, American literature, and environmental studies at Penn State Altoona.

Tom Dolack is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Russian at Wheaton College. His areas of teaching and research include Russian literature, European poetry, translation and imitation, and evo-cognitive approaches to literature. He lives in Norton, Massachusetts, with his wife and two children.

Ubaraj Katawal is a lecturer at Case Western Reserve University. He earned his doctoral degree in English from the State University of New York, Binghamton; in his dissertation he focused on postcolonial literature, especially from South Asia and Africa. His articles have appeared in peer-reviewed journals such as Postcolonial Text. [End Page 154]

Monica Lott is a doctoral candidate at Kent State University, where she specializes in twentieth-century British detective fiction. Her dissertation focuses on the Detection Club and issues of war, gender, and nostalgia in the works of Dorothy L. Sayers and Agatha Christie.

Julia Nitz is Assistant Lecturer for American Studies at the English Department at Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg and managing director at the Centre for United States Studies. Her interests are in American women’s identity during the Civil War and postbellum period, historiographic narratology, media and adaptation studies, film analysis, and postmodern literature. [End Page 155]

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