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  • Notes on Contributors

Graham Adams, Jr. is professor of history and chairman of American Studies at Mount Allison University. He is author ofAge of Industrial Violence, 1910–15 (Columbia University Press) and of several essays in the Encyclopedia of American Institutions and in The Canadian Review of American Studies on industrial relations, the Progressive Era and radicalism in the U.S.

Daniel Belgrad is a doctoral candidate in the American Studies program at Yale University. His current research interests include the social and cultural history of the 1940s, as well as the interstate highway system.

Garin Burbank is associate professor of history at the University of Winnipeg. His recent publications have appeared in The Canadian Review of American Studies and in a variety of American historical journals. He is currently working on Reagan’s reforms of the California welfare system.

Theodore Cohn is associate professor of political science at Simon Fraser University. He has published essays in Canada and International Trade (1985) in McGill University Studies in International Development (1985), and in The Political Economy of North-South Relations (1987). He has also recently completed a book, The International Politics of Agricultural Trade: Canadian-American Relations in a Global Agricultural Context, forthcoming from University of British Columbia Press.

Robert Cuff, a frequent contributor to this journal, is professor of history at York University, Toronto, and is currently visiting professor at the Graduate School of Business Administration of Harvard University. He is working on business and government relations in the United States.

Eve Kornfeld is assistant professor of history at San Diego State University. She has published essays on women and on the female Bildungsroman in nineteenth-century America in the Journal of American Culture (1984, 1987) and on the yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia in Pennsylvania History (1984), on women in post-Revolutionary America, and has an essay forthcoming on David Ramsay in the Journal of the Early Republic.

Eugene E. Leach is associate professor of history and American studies and director of the American Studies Program at Trinity College, Hartford. He is the author of essays in Mid-America (1989), American Quarterly (1987) and American Studies (1986) on mass society theory, attitudes toward health and collective behavior. He is preparing, with Gregory Bush, a manuscript for North Carolina University Press titled Mobs and Masses: the Idea of the Crowd in Industrial America, as well as an essay for 1915: the Cultural Moment (Rutgers).

Elisabeth Israels Perry is associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University. She is the author of Belle Moskowitz: Feminine Politics and the Exercise of Power in the Age of Alfred E. Smith (1987). Currently she is working on women and oral reform in the Progressive era.

Michael Peterman, associate dean of research and graduate studies at Trent University, has written Robertson Davies (Boston, 1986), as well as essays on Susanna Moodie, Margaret Laurence and Tillie Olsen; and on Catharine Parr Traill and Willa Cather (forthcoming)..

David Stineback is professor of English at the University of Rhode Island. He is author of Shifting World: Social Change and Nostalgia in the American Novel (1976) and Puritans, Indians, and Manifest Destiny (1977). Currently he is lecturing and writing on Harriet Beecher Stowe for NEH and ALA. His articles on Willa Cather have appeared in Arizona Quarterly (1973), Prospects (1982) and in The Canadian Review of American Studies (1984).

James Stull is a doctoral candidate at the University of Iowa. He has published book reviews on literary journalism, autobiography and rock-and-roll.

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