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CONTRIBUTORS Antony Higgins (Ph.D. University of Pittsburg) is Assistant Professor of Spanish-American colonial literature at the University of New Mexico. He has published articles in the Journal ofHispanic Philology, Revista Iberoamericana, and Revista de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana. His current project is satirical writing of the colonial period in Mexico and Peru. e-mail: celt@unm.edu. Adrienne L. Martín is Associate Professor of Spanish at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of Cervantes and the Burlesqúe Sonnet (Berkeley: U of California P, 1991) as well as numerous articles on Golden Age literature, with special emphasis on Cervantes, the burlesque, and issues of sexuality. She is currently completing a book on sexuality and transgression in early modero Spanish literature. email : almartin@ucdavis.edu. R. John McCaw (Ph.D. Princeton) is Visiting Assistant Professor of Spanish at SUNY-Buffalo. He has revised his doctoral dissertation, Learning from the Labyrinth: Life, Death and Ethics in Góngora's 'Soledades,' for publication as a monograph. He also has' articles forthcoming on Góngora's Soledades and Polifemo, and is currently preparing studies on Quevedo and Calderón. e-mail: rmccaw@acsu.buffalo.edu Georgina Sabat de Rivers, Profesora Emérita de la State University of New York at Stony Brook, nació en Santiago de Cuba. Después de sus estudios, en Cuba, de cultura y lengua francesas, y de filosofía y letras, obtuvo la maestría y el doctorado (español-francés) en The Johns Hopkins University. Ha publicado siete libros, más de 50 artículos, capítulos parahistorias de la literatura, y ensayos para obras de consulta sobre la poesía de la Colonia, y especialmente de Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. Apareció con Octavio Paz en la serie televisada "Conversaciones con Octavio Paz" (1984) en la larga sesión dedicada a la décima musa. La profesora Sabat de Rivers editará un número especial de Calíope (4.1-2 [1998])sopre la poesía colonial. ro CoNTRIBUTORS 0.3 123 Diana de Armas Wilson is Professor of English & Renaissance Studies at the University of Denver. She has written Allegories ofLave: Cervantes's 'Persiles y Segismunda' (Princeton UP, 1991); co-editedQuixotic Desire: Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Cervantes (Comell UP, 1993); and is sole editor of the forthcoming Norton critica! edition of Don Quijote. She is just completing a book-length study on Cervantes, the New World, and the Novel. e-mail: diwilson@du.edu. Elizabeth Wright is completing her doctoral dissertation at Johns Hopkins University. Her project focuses on how intertwined literary and historical discours~s reflected, altered or concealed social crisis, political change and artistic identity during Spain'sfin de siglo crisis (1598-1600). Her article presents research conducted under the auspices of a Fulbright grant. Commencing Fall 1998, she will be an Assistant Professor of Spanish at the University of Georgia. e-mail: erwr@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu. ...

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