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Contributors Contributors Anne Brydon is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Wtlfrid Laurier University, and coeditor of Consuming Fashion: Adorning the Transnational Body (Berg 1998). She conducts research in Iceland and Canada on representation and visual culture; identity, self and subjectivity; the politics of knowledge and the social production of space, place and nature in modernity. John Burbidge, FRSC, is professor emeritus · of philosophy at Trent University. He has written on theology, on Hegel's logic and on the philosophy of nature. In retirement , he has taken up the binding and restoration of books. Dennis Duffy is an emeritus professor of English, University of Toronto. He resides in Vancouver. His current research interests include the history of Canadian cultural sites and media history during the US Civil War. Pauline Greenhill is Professor of Women's Studies at the University of Winnipeg. Her previous collaboration with Diane Tye includes Undisciplined Women: Tradition and Culture in Canada (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997), a collection which won the ~Ui Kaija KOngas Maranda Prize of the American Folklore Society Women's Section. Steven Maynard is a social historian. His work on the history of sexuality, gender and the working class has appeared in the Canadian Historical Review, the Journal of the History ofSexuality, Radical History Review and Labour/Le Travail. Philip Massolin earned his doctorate in 1998 through the University of Alberta's Department of History and Classics. His PhD dissertation will be published by the University of Toronto Press under the title Canadian Intellectuals, the Tory Tradition, and the Challenge ofModernity. He has also written on Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan and George Grant and the role of technology in modern Canadian society. Massolin's current research interests include Robertson Davies's reaction to postwar cultural development He is currently is Manager of Research for Chinook Multimedia. Paul Rynard is a doctoral candidate at York University and is currently teaching in the Department of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University. He has recently published on the Nisga'a Treaty in the Canadian Journal ofPolitical Science and is co-editor, with David P. Shugarman, of Cn1elty and Deception: The Controversy Over Dirty Hands in Politics. Diane Tye is an Associate Professor in the Department of Folklore, Memorial University of Newfoundland. She and Pauline Greenhill are currently recipients of a SSHRC Research Development Initiatives grant to assess the intellectual and social contributions of academic folklore/ethnology studies in Canada. Patricia Wood is an Assistant Professor of Geography at York University. She is co-author, with Engin F. Isin, of Citizenship and Identity (Sage,1999). 224 Volume 36 • No. 2 • (Ete 2001 Summer) ...

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