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  • Notes on Contributors

Wesley Beal is Associate Professor of English at Lyon College. He has published on the cultural logic of modernism in Networks of Modernism (University of Iowa Press, 2015) and in journals such as American Literary History and College Literature.

Timothy D. Crowley is an Assistant Professor at Northern Illinois University. His research highlights Anglo-Spanish connections and classical reception in sixteenth-century literature, especially in relation to political, religious, and philosophical contexts. The current book project is entitled Feigned Histories of Secret Marriage: Love, Law, and Politics in Sidney’s Arcadia and Spanish Chivalric Romance.

Jeffrey R. Di Leo is Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences and Professor of English and Philosophy at the University of Houston-Victoria. His books include Corporate Humanities in Higher Education: Moving Beyond the Neoliberal Academy (2013), Turning the Page: Book Culture in the Digital Age (2014), Dead Theory: Derrida, Death, and the Afterlife of Theory (ed., 2016), Higher Education under Late Capitalism: Identity, Conduct, and the Neoliberal Condition (2017), and Bloomsbury Handbook of Literary and Cultural Theory (forthcoming, 2018).

John C. Havard is an associate professor of English at Auburn University at Montgomery. His monograph, Hispanicism and Early U.S. Literature: Spain, Mexico, Cuba, and the Origins of U.S. National Identity, is forthcoming with University of Alabama Press. His recent published essays include work on Mary Peabody Mann, Martin Delany, early African-American fiction, and Herman Melville.

Donald R. Wehrs is Hargis Professor of English Literature at Auburn University. He specializes in novel genre and history, eighteenth-century studies, postcolonial studies, and comparative literature. He is editor of Levinas and Twentieth-Century Literature (2013) and co-editor of The Palgrave Handbook of Affect Studies and Textual Criticism (2017), Cognition, Literature, and History (2014), and Levinas and Nineteenth-Century Literature (2009). He has published three books: Pre-Colonial Africa in Colonial African Narratives (2008), Islam, Ethics, Revolt (2008), African Feminist Fiction and Indigenous Values (2001). His recent essays include work on Shakespeare, medieval romance, Cervantes, and eighteenth-century British fiction. [End Page 85]

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