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Notes on Contributors 267 Notes on Contributors Robert D. Accinelli is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Toronto who specializes in twentieth-century U.S. foreign policy. His essays and articles have appeared in Historical Papers of the Canadian Historical Association (1972), Ohio History, Peace and Change and The Historian. He is currently working on a study of liberal internationalists in the American peace movement between the world wars. Margret Andersen is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Languages at the University of Guelph where she teaches twentieth-century French literature. She is the author of three books: Paul Claude! et L'Allemagne (1965), Mecanismes Structuraux (1967), and Mother H'asnot aperson (1972).Her articles deal with such topics as Women's Studies (McGill Journal of Education, UNESCO Review of Education) and feminist criticism (Atlantis). She has published essays on Claude! (Linguistics Circle of North Dakota and Manitoba), Marie-Claire Blais (Sphinx), Benoit Groult (French Women Writers [Stock], in press). She is currently concentrating her research on Flora Tristan, as well as Annie Leclerc. Roger Asselineau is Professor of American literature at the University of Paris-Sorbonne and co-editor of Etudes Anglaises. His publications include Theliterary Reputation of Mark n1:ain (1954; rptd. 1971), The Evolution of Walt ~Vhitman, 2 vols. (1960, 1962), Robert Frost (1964), £. A. Poe (1970), Hemingway (1972). He has also published both in French and English essays on Dreiser, O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, Faulkner and others. He is now at work on a critical essay on Washington Irving, and continues his research on Walt Whitman. Stephen A. Black is Professor of English at Simon Fraser University. His most recent book is a psychoanalytic study of the creative process in Walt Whitman (Princeton, 1975). His essays on such subjects as Whitman, Melville, T.S. Eliot and literary theory have been published in PM LA, College English, Queen'sQuarterly and West Coast Revieiv. His book in progress studies from a psychoanalytic perspective what he calls '"the literary process" - affective, cognitive, transferential, imagistic and other aspects of responses to literature. He is in his fifth year of formal study of psychoanalysis as a candidate in the Seattle Psychoanalytic Institute. James Doyle is an Assistant Professor of English at Wilfrid Laurier University . Besides an earlier article in the Review, he has published in various Canadian journals including Canadian Li1erature and Atlantis, and he is the author of a forthcoming biography, Annie Howells and Achille Frechette. 268 Notes on Contributors Ian MacPherson is an Associate Professor of History at the Universitv of Victoria. He is the author of Each for All: A History of the Co-operdtive Movement in English Canada, 1900-1945and of monographs on the historv of Co-operative Insurance Services and Co-operative Trust. He is preparing~ history of United Co-operatives of Ontario and a series of studies in Canadian agricultural history, 1930-55. J.C. M. Ogelsby is Professor of History at the University of Western Ontario. He is Coordinator for the three volumes on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the General History of America project of the Pan American Institute of Geography and History. He is presently at work on a study of Canada's influence on the Cuban autonomists, 1865-98. Ernest H. Redekop is an Associate Professor of English at the Universityof Western Ontario. He is on leave in 1978-79 pursuing his research on Cooper at Harvard University. His scholarship iswell known to readers of the Review, his most recent review essay on Cooper's landscapes having appeared in VIIl/2. Louis D. Rubin, Jr., is a native of Charleston, South Carolina, and is University Distinguished Professor of English at the University of North Carolinaat Chapel Hill. He is author and editor of some twenty-eight books, most ofthem having to do with the South and its history and literature. Among his more recent books are: William Elliott Shoots a Bear (1975), Virginia: A History (1977), The Wary Fugitives: Four Poets and the South (1978), and an anthology , The Literary South (1979). His contribution to this number of the Review is a paper read at the Fifth Alabama Symposium on English and American Literature, held at...

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