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Contributors EDWARD CALLAN is Professor of English at Western Mich­ igan University. He has published widely on modem litera­ ture, and is currently completing a book on W. H. Auden. His W. B. Yeats: A General Introduction for my Work is scheduled to be published shortly by the Dolmen Press, Dublin. Also well known for his work on African literature, he is the author of Alan Baton (1968) and is compiler and editor of The Long View, a collection of Paton’s writings. JOHN W. VELZ, Professor of English at the University of Texas, Austin, is the author of numerous articles on medieval and Tudor drama. His books include Shakespeare and the Classical Tradition, and he is currently editing Julius Caesar in the MLA Variorum Shakespeare series. GORMAN BEAUCHAMP teaches in the Humanities Depart­ ment of the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan. He is the author of a number of articles, and is associate editor of a new journal, Alternative Futures: The Journal of Utopian Studies. BARBARA C. BOWEN, who holds degrees from Oxford and the University of Paris, is Professor of French at the Uni­ versity of Illinois, Urbana. Her most recent book is The Age of Bluff: Paradox and Ambiguity in Rabelais and Montaigne (1972). ...

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