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JEMCS 3.1 (Spring/Slimmer 2003) Contributors Victoria E. Burke is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Ottawa. She has published articles on manu script writing by early modern women and is the co-editor of The 'Centuries' of Julia Palmer. Adam Max Cohen is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of English at the University of North Florida. He has published articles on Shakespeare, Marlowe, Italian and English mod els of the self, the history of early modern science, and con temporary popular culture and he is currently at work on a book project entitled "Technology and the Self in Renaissance Literature." Roxanne Kent-Drury is Assistant Professor of Literature and Language at Northern Kentucky University. She has published on eighteenth-century drama and on travel and exploration literature, and she is currently writing a book on using the Internet to teach world literature. Michelle Ephraim is Assistant Professor of English at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. She has work published or forthcoming in such journals as Studies in English Literature, Women's Studies, Theatre Journal, and Shakespeare Yearbook, and she is currently researching a book project on representations of Jewish women on the early modern English stage. Brian Lockey is Assistant Professor of English at San Francisco State University. He has published an article on Edmund Spenser in English Literary Renaissance and is cur rently finishing a book on the early modern romance and the development of international legal doctrine. 178 The Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies Robert Markley currently is Jackson Distinguished Chair of British Literature at West Virginia University, and will be Professor of English at the University of Illinois in Fall 2003. His book Fictions of Eurocentrism: The Far East and the English Imagination, 1600-1800 will be published in 2004. Jeanne H. McCarthy received an Outstanding Dissertation Award from the University of Texas at Austin in 2000. An article on Elizabeth's patronage of the boy companies is forthcoming in Studies inPhilology. She is currently teach ing at Oglethorpe University and writing a book that focuses on the cultural influence of the children's companies. Deneen Senasi is a Ph.D. candidate in the Hudson Strode Program in Renaissance Studies at the University of Alabama. Her dissertation, "Re-Naming the Rose: On the (Dis)Appearance of the Female Form in Early Modern Culture," examines the relative value of gendered names and bodies within the representational field of early modern English culture. ...

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