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  • Notes on Contributors

Francesca Brooks is in the final year of her PhD with the English Department at King's College London. Her AHRC-LAHP-funded thesis is titled 'Poet of the Medieval Modern: Reading the Anglo-Saxon Library with David Jones'.

Anna-Maria Hartmann is a scholar of early modern English literature with a special focus on classical reception, the history of myth theory, and English-European literary relationships. She is the author of English Mythography in its European Context, 1500-1650 (OUP, 2018).

Florence Hazrat is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Geneva, translating and editing a seventeenth-century German version of The Taming of the Shrew. She has recently been awarded a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship at the University of Sheffield for a project on parentheses in Renaissance romance. She has published on Shakespeare and music, as well as dance, and is working on her monograph on refrains in early modern poetry. Her research interests include sound in literature, rhetoric and versification, punctuation and typography, as well as cooperation between literature and cognitive science.

Tom McAlindon is Emeritus Professor at the University of Hull. His most recent publications are on Thomas Hardy and William Trevor.

Oliver Morgan teaches early modern English literature at the University of Geneva. His first monograph, Turn-taking in Shakespeare, is forthcoming with Oxford University Press.

A. J. Nickerson works on nineteenth- and early twentieth-century poetry and poetics, and has just completed a PhD at the University of Cambridge.

Gabriel Roberts studied English Literature at the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford. He now teaches English at a secondary school in London. [End Page i]

Esther Osorio Whewell is currently undertaking an AHRC-funded PhD in Cambridge, thinking about Edmund Spenser and Lancelot Andrewes, and the paradigms and schematics of good and bad attention in sermons, prayer, and poetry.

Claire Wilkinson is a Teaching Associate in English at the University of Cambridge. Her research focuses upon how literature has understood financial crisis from 1720 to the present day. She is completing her first book, which looks at non-canonical responses to the South Sea Bubble. [End Page ii]

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