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C O N T R I B U T O R S Frederick A. de Armas, Edwin Erie Sparks Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature at The Pennsylvania State University, has authored and edited numerous books on Golden Age Spanish Literature. They include: The Invisible Mistress: Aspects of Feminism and Fantasy in the Golden Age (1976), The Return ofAstraea: An Astral-Imperial Myth in Calderdn(1986), The Prince in the Tower: Perceptions of'La vida es suefio (1993); Heavenly Bodies: The Realms ofLa estrella de Sevilla (1996); A Star-Crossed Golden Age: Myth and the Spanish Comedia (1998), and Cervantes, Raphael and the Classics (1998). Edward H. Friedman is Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature at Indiana University. His research areas include Early Modern narrative, drama and poetry, as well as topics in contemporary literature. He is Editor of the Bulletin of the Comediantes. Lia Schwartz is the Dartmouth Professor of Spanish and Professor of Comparative Literature, and Chair of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Dartmouth College. She has worked primarily on Golden Age literature, especially on satire and poetry, and on the relations between Hispanic literature and culture, and the Greek and Latin classics at large. Among her publications are Metafora y satira en la obra de Quevedo (Madrid: Taurus, 1984), Quevedo: Discurso y representacidn (Pamplona: EUNSA, 1987), and many articles on questions of genre and poetics in early modern European literature. She co-edited with Ignacio Arellano two annotated anthologies of Quevedo's poetry: Poesia selecta (Barcelona: PPU, 1989) and the anthology reviewed in this issue of Caliope. She is a member of the board of the Asociacion International Siglo de Oro, and is now President of this organization. Diane E. Sieber (Ph.D. Princeton) is Assistant Professor of Spanish at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She has published articles on the Morisco expulsions, on Cervantes, on the Golden Age theater and on early modern Spanish historiography. She is currently completing a book on historiography from the margin: rewriting family, municipal and cultural history in sixteenth-century Spain, e-mail: diane.sieber@colorado.edu. Harry Velez-Quinones is Associate Professor of Spanish at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, WA. He has published articles in journals such as Revista de Estudios Hispdnicos, Journal ofInterdisciplinary Literary Studies, Revista Hispdnica Moderna, La Torre, Celestinesca and others. His research interests center on the comedia of Lope de Vega, Queer Theory, and twentieth-century Spanish prose. He is also involved in projects exploring the application of web-based technologies to the teaching of foreign languages and literatures, and the dissemination of writing, music and the visual arts. CALfOPE Vol. 5, No. 1 (1999): page 107 ...

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