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  • Contributors

Ephraim Nimni is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. His published work includes Marxism and Nationalism: The Theoretical Origins of a Political Crisis and “Marx Engels and the National Question” in Will Kymlicka (ed.), The Rights of Minority Cultures. He edited the first English translation of Otto Bauer, The Question of Nationalities and Social Democracy. His recent The Challenge of Post-Zionism is reviewed in this issue. Another book, National Cultural Autonomy and its Critics, is forthcoming. He can be reached at e.nimni@unsw.edu.au.

Michaelle Browers is an Assistant Professor at Wake Forest University. Her most recent publication is An Islamic Reformation? (co-edited with Charles Kurzman). She can be reached at browerm@wfu.edu.

Anne Caldwell is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Louisville. Currently she is working on international political theory and a conceptual history of humanity. She can be reached at aicald01@athena.louisville.edu.

Floyd B. Dunphy is completing an interdisciplinary PhD in the departments of English, Architecture and Comparative Literatures at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. His articles have appeared in journals such as Symposium: Journal of the Canadian Society for Hermeneutics and Postmodern Thought and Comparative Literature. He can be reached at fdunphy@interchange.ubc.ca.

Simon Critchley is Professor of Philosophy, Graduate Faculty, New School for Social Research and Visiting Professor at Cardozo Law School in New York. He is author of many books and his new book, *Things Merely Are* will be published by Routledge in April 2005.

Gabriela Basterra is an Assistant Professor of Spanish Literature at New York University. Her book, Seductions of Fate: Tragic Subjectivity, Ethics, Politics, will be published in February 2004. Among her essays (published or forthcoming) are “Against Tragic Sublime Sense,” “The Grammar of Fate in Lorca’s Bodas de sangre,” “Self-Denying Creativity,” and “The Other of Reason in Quotation Marks.” She can be reached at: gabriela.basterra@nyu.edu.

John Docker, Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, is in 2003/4 attached to the Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies, Georgetown University. His most recent book was 1492: The Poetics of Diaspora. He is co-convening a conference on ‘Gandhi, Non-Violence and Modernity’ to be held at the HRC in September 2004. He can be reached at john.docker@anu.edu.au.

Nevzat Soguk is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawaii, Manoa. He is the author of States and Strangers: Refugees and Displacements of Statecraft. His “Incarcerating Travels: Travel Stories, Tourist Orders, and the Politics of The Hawaiian Paradise” is forthcoming in The Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change. He can be reached at nevzat@hawaii.edu.

Srirupa Roy is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. She has written on cultural politics, postcolonialism, and nationalism. She is presently completing a book, Nationalists into Nationals: The Cultural Politics of Nation-State Formation.She can be reached at srirupa@polsci.umass.edu.

David Wills is Professor of French and English at the University at Albany (SUNY). His published titles include Prosthesis and he is translator of Derrida’s Gift of Death, Right of Inspection, and the forthcoming Counterpath. A book of essays entitled Matchbook: Essays in Deconstruction is also forthcoming. He can be reached at DWills@uamail.albany.edu.

Thomas Hawley is Assistant Professor of Government at Eastern Washington University in Cheney. He can be reached at thawley@mail.ewu.edu

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