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  • Notes on Contributors

Ruth Abbott is University Lecturer in the Long Nineteenth Century in the Cambridge University English Faculty. She is currently working on a new book project on George Eliot.

John Barnes is Emeritus Professor of English at La Trobe University. He has written extensively on Australian literature, and has recently completed a biography of Charles Joseph La Trobe.

Grace Egan is a DPhil candidate at Wolfson College, Oxford. She researches eighteenth-century correspondence and the representation of speech.

Alexandra Lawrie is Chancellor’s Fellow in English literature at the University of Edinburgh. Her book The Beginnings of University English: Extramural Study, 1885-1910 was published earlier this year.

Raphael Lyne is a Reader in English Renaissance Literature in the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Murray Edwards College. He is an editor of The Cambridge Quarterly.

Harriet Phillips is a postdoctoral researcher at Queen Mary University of London, working on ‘The Complete Works of Sir Thomas Browne’ (forthcoming, Oxford University Press).

Malcolm Pittock, although retired for many years, is still engaged in reassessing familiar texts and trying to rescue from oblivion those that have been unjustly neglected. He is at present adapting a paper he gave at the 2012 Leavis Society Conference about the significance of Leavis’s changing evaluation of Lady Chatterley’s Lover, and reasearching a projected article on the late Victorian novelist, Mark Rutherford, whom Lawrence admired.

Eric Sandberg is Assistant Professor of Literature at Miyazaki International College. He is the author of Virginia Wolf: Experiments in Character (Cambria Press, 2014) and has published on topics related to twentieth and twenty-first century fiction, genre fiction, and modernism.

Victoria Stewart is Reader in Modern and Contemporary Literature at the University of Leicester. Her publications include Narratives of Memory: British Writing of the 1940s (2006) and The Second World War in Contemporary British Fiction: Secret Histories (2011). [End Page i]

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