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  • Notes on Contributors

Andrew J. Counter is lecturer in nineteenth-century French studies at King's College London. He has published widely on nineteenth-century French literature and is the author of Inheritance in Nineteenth-Century French Culture: Wealth, Knowledge and the Family (Oxford: Legenda, 2010). He is currently preparing a monograph on the politics of sexuality under the Bourbon Restoration in France, 1815-30.

Joy Damousi is professor of history at the University of Melbourne. Her publications include Freud in the Antipodes: A Cultural History of Psychoanalysis in Australia (University of New South Wales Press, 2006) and Colonial Voices: A Cultural History of English in Australia, 1840-1940 (Cambridge University Press, 2010). One of her current projects is "Making the Case: The Case Study Genre in Sexology, Psychoanalysis and Literature" (with Birgit Lang and Katie Stutton).

Lucas Hilderbrand is associate professor of film and media studies and visual studies at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape and Copyright (Duke University Press, 2009) and Paris Is Burning (Queer Film Classics series, Arsenal Pulp Press, 2012). He is currently researching the cultural history of gay bars and clubs in the United States.

Carla Hustak is a visiting assistant professor and postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She teaches gender history and the history of emotions. She published "Saving Civilization from the 'Green-Eyed Monster': Emma Goldman and the Sex Reform Campaign against Jealousy" in the Journal of Transnational American Studies. She is also revising her dissertation as a book manuscript titled "Radical Intimacies: Affective Potential and the Politics of Love in the Transatlantic Sex Reform Movement, 1900-1930." Her [End Page 556] current research investigates the sexual politics of botanists in the agricultural experiment stations.

Liat Kozma is a senior lecturer in the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She is the author of Policing Egyptian Women: Sex, Law and Medicine in Khedival Egypt (Syracuse University Press, 2011). Her other publications deal with present-day feminism in the Arab world and with drug traffic and prohibition in the Middle East in the interwar period. Her current research project deals with interwar traffic in women in the Middle East.

Yorick Smaal is a research fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security at Griffith University, Australia, where he is undertaking a major research project on histories of child sexual abuse. Yorick has published and edited works on various aspects of homosexuality in Australia. He is coeditor of Queensland Review. [End Page 557]

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