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  • Reviewers

Mark Allison (maalliso@owu.edu) is Associate Professor of English at Ohio Wesleyan University. His work has appeared in ELH, Utopian Studies, Nineteenth-Century Literature, and Nineteenth-Century Prose. He is completing a book manuscript entitled “Imagining Socialism: Aesthetics, Anti-Politics, and Literature in Britain, 1817–1918.”

Jordanna Bailkin (bailkin@u.washington.edu) is Jere L. Bacharach Endowed Professor in International Studies and Professor of History and Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Washington. She is the author of The Culture of Property: The Crisis of Liberalism in Modern Britain (2004) and The Afterlife of Empire (2012), and is currently at work on a book about refugee camps in Britain from the 1930s to the 1980s.

Gordon Bigelow (bigelow@rhodes.edu) teaches in the English Department at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee. He is the author of Fiction, Famine, and the Rise of Economics in Victorian Britain and Ireland (2003) and of essays in Novel, LIT, ELH, and Harper’s. His current work is on Trollope’s Irish fiction.

Elleke Boehmer (elleke.boehmer@gmail.com) is Professor of World Literature in English at Oxford and Director of TORCH. She is the author of five monographs and five novels, most recently Indian Arrivals, 1870–1915: Networks of British Empire and The Shouting in the Dark (both 2015). She is the General Editor of the Oxford Studies in Postcolonial Literature series, and was a Man Booker International judge from 2013 to 2015.

John Bowen (john.bowen@york.ac.uk) is Professor of English at the University of York and Co-Director of the University of California Dickens Project. He is the author of Other Dickens: Pickwick to Chuzzlewit (2000), and has edited Dickens’s Barnaby Rudge for Penguin and Trollope’s Phineas Redux and Barchester Towers for Oxford World’s Classics. He is editing Bleak House for Norton and writing Reading Dickens for Cambridge University Press.

G.A. Bremner (alex.bremner@ed.ac.uk) is Senior Lecturer in Architectural History at the University of Edinburgh. He specializes in the history and theory of Victorian architecture and urbanism, with a particular interest in the built environment of the British imperial and colonial world. He is author of Imperial Gothic: Religious Architecture and High Anglican Culture in the British Empire, c.1840–1870 (Yale University Press, 2013), and is editor of Architecture and Urbanism in the British Empire, published by Oxford University Press (2016) as part of the Oxford History of the British Empire companion series. [End Page 595]

Adelene Buckland (adelene.buckland@kcl.ac.uk) is Senior Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature at King’s College, London. She is the author of Novel Science: Fiction and the Invention of Nineteenth-Century Geology (2013), and co-editor with Beth Palmer of A Return to the Common Reader: Essays in Honour of Richard Altick (2011).

Flurin Condrau (flurin.condrau@uzh.ch) is Professor of the History of Medicine at the University of Zurich. His publications include “Negotiating Hospital Infections” (with R. G. Kirk, in Dynamis, 2011); “Tuberculosis: Then and Now” (with M. Worboys, McGill-Queens University Press, Montreal, 2010); and “The Patient’s View Meets the Clinical Gaze” (Social History of Medicine, 2007). He is currently leading a project on the history of pediatric endocrinology in Zurich, where he continues to pursue his interests in the history of infection.

Jacqueline R. deVries (devries@augsburg.edu) is Professor of History at Augsburg College and is co-editor of Women, Gender and Religious Cultures, 1800–1940 (2010) with Sue Morgan. She is completing a synthesis of women’s contributions to British religious history for Palgrave Macmillan, and recently published “Sounds Taken for Wonders: Revivalism and Religious Experience in the British Women’s Movement,” in Material Religion in Modern Britain: The Spirit of Things (2015), edited by Timothy Willem Jones and Lucinda Matthews-Jones.

Annmarie Drury (annmarie.drury@qc.cuny.edu) is Assistant Professor of English at Queens College, CUNY. She is the author of Translation as Transformation in Victorian Poetry (2015) and the translator and editor of Stray Truths: Selected Poems of Euphrase...

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