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  • Essay Contributors

Peter Cochran was once an actor and a schoolteacher. He has organised eight international Byron conferences and published seventeen books on the poet. He edits Byron’s works and correspondence on the website of the International Association of Byron Societies, and is a frequent contributor to the Byron Journal. He was responsible for the Byron entry in the Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature, and the DNB entries on Byron’s friends Trelawny and Hobhouse, the latter of whose diaries he has also edited. Until last year he was editor of the Newstead Byron Society Review.

Howard Davies – educated at the King’s School, Chester, and Queens’ College, Cambridge, where he read Law – is a long-serving publisher’s editor, formerly with interests in the mediaeval drama. He now publishes privately under his own imprint. A publishing memoir, Loose Connections by Esther Menell, will appear in the autumn.

J. Andrew Hubbell is Associate Professor of Nineteenth Century British Literature at Susquehanna University, where he is also Chair of the Department of English and Creative Writing. He has published essays on Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, Milton and Romantic foodways. He is currently working on a book-length study of Byron’s cultural ecology.

Jason Kolkey is a doctoral candidate at Loyola University Chicago, completing a dissertation on the role of literary piracy in the development of British Romanticism as a literary canon. His work draws on the methods of book history and textual studies to consider the political, legal, social, and economic contexts of illegitimate texts. An article discussing the pirate editions of Percy Bysshe Shelley’s Queen Mab is forthcoming in European Romantic Review.

Troy Wellington Smith is a graduate student in English literature at the University of Mississippi, where he is concentrating on the intertextuality of Søren Kierkegaard and English literature from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century. He is a Summer Fellow of the Howard V. and Edna H. Hong Kierkegaard Library of St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, and his article ‘“Born for opposition”: The Narrator of Byron’s Don Juan and the Climacus of the Postscript’ will appear in a future issue of the Library’s publication, the Søren Kierkegaard Newsletter. [End Page vi]

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