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  • Notes on Contributors

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N. Christine Brookes, Professor of French at Central Michigan University, is a specialist in nineteenth-century French cultural studies and transnational cultural relations. She cowrote the book The French Face of Nathaniel Hawthorne: Monsieur de l’Aubépine & His Second Empire Critics with Michael W. Anesko (Penn State).

J. Michelle Coghlan is Lecturer in American Literature at the University of Manchester, UK. She is the author of Sensational Internationalism: The Paris Commune and the Remapping of American Memory in the Long Nineteenth Century (2016), which won the 2017 Arthur Miller Centre First Book Prize in American Studies, as well as essays published in Arizona Quarterly, the Henry James Review, and Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities. In 2014, she served as guest editor of the “Tasting Modernism” special issue of Resilience.

Julie E. Hall is Professor of English at Sam Houston State University and editor of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Review. She is coeditor, with Monika Elbert and Katharine Rodier, of Reinventing the Peabody Sisters (2006) and author of numerous articles on Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne, published in Symbiosis, Legacy, and the Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, among other journals and collections.

Djelal Kadir is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of books in comparative cultural studies, postcolonial studies, and world literature, as well as editor or coeditor of a number of literary histories, anthologies of world literature, and special issues of scholarly journals on literary theory and on authors from around the world. He is the founding president of the International American Studies Association, a founding board member of Synapsis: The European School of Comparative Studies, a senior fellow and executive board member of The Stockholm Collegium of World Literary History, and a member of the founding board of the Institute for World Literature.

Travis Montgomery is Associate Professor of English at Oklahoma Christian University. He is an officer of the Poe Studies Association, and he recently wrote an essay about gothic poetry that will appear in The Cambridge Companion to American Gothic, a collection of essays edited by Jeffrey Weinstock. [End Page E29]

Marcia D. Nichols is Assistant Professor in the Center for Learning Innovation at the University of Minnesota Rochester, where she teaches literature and medical humanities and engages in learning research. In addition to her work on pedagogy, she has published on Charles Brockden Brown, early modern erotica, and eighteenth- and nineteenth-century medicine and midwifery. Her current book project analyzes the constructions of gender, sexuality, and masculine identity in midwifery manuals and other medical texts in the long eighteenth century.

Gretchen J. Woertendyke is Associate Professor of English at the University of South Carolina. Her first book, Hemispheric Regionalism: Romance and the Geography of Genre, was published by Oxford University Press in 2016. She has written on secret histories, slave narratives, and Charles Brockden Brown, among other topics. Her book-in-progress is currently titled “A History of Secrecy in the United States.” [End Page E30]

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