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  • Contributors

David Clippinger is an associate professor of English and American Studies, and is currently completing "Authors and other Marketing Monsters: Representations of Writers in Postmodern American Culture for Routledge Press." His other publications include The Body of This Life: Reading William Bronk, Bursts of Light: The Collected Later Poems of William Bronk, and The Mind's Landscape: 20th Century American Poetry. He is also at work on "Where Words End: Benjamin Britten's Operatic "Readings" of Literature."

James Miller is an assistant professor of American literature and American culture at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. His published work includes articles on the construction of whiteness in 1920's hard-boiled fiction, and the role of public memory within the 1930's American documentary movement. He is currently at work on a book manuscript tentatively entitled "Managerial Memory: History and the American Middle Class."

Kristin Risley is an assistant professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. She is currently completing a book on Norwegian American literary culture.

Ingrid Satelmajer is a Ph.D. candidate in English Language and Literature at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her dissertation examines the posthumous periodical publication of Emily Dickinson's poetry in the 1890s. She has published in Book History on Dickinson and St. Nicholas.

Arthur Scherr is assistant professor of History at Kingsborough Community College. He has written several studies on newspapers' and magazines' role in the Early Republic, such as 'I Married Me a Wife: Male Attitudes Toward Women in the "American Museum," 1787-1792 (1999). He is currently working on a psychological biography of William Cobbett, a study of Thomas Jefferson's views on Haiti, and a reappraisal of Jefferson's ideas concerning such topics as New England politics, women, and students. [End Page 145]

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