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  • Contributors

Alexander Creighton, a PhD candidate in English at Harvard University, writes primarily about how notions of time and temporality in literary works connect to the cultural and historical contexts in which those works emerge. His in-progress dissertation, "Fiction's Metronomes: Music, Time, and the Early English Novel," considers time not only as a named concept but as a phenomenon shaped by structures of duration and recursion.

Jane Donahue Eberwein is Distinguished Professor of English, emerita, at Oakland University.

Michelle Kohler is Associate Professor of English at Tulane University. She is the author of Miles of Stare: Transcendentalism and the Problem of Literary Vision in 19th-Century America and editor of The New Emily Dickinson Studies, forthcoming from Cambridge University Press, 2019). Her articles have appeared in such journals as ESQ, Nineteenth-Century Literature, the Emily Dickinson Journal, Arizona Quarterly, and American Literary Realism, and she is currently writing a book on Dickinson and mid-19th-century constructions of time and timekeeping.

George Life is a PhD Candidate in the Department of English at the University at Buffalo. His dissertation examines contemporary poets' engagement with U.S. coloniality. Other work includes two poetry manuscripts, excerpts from which appear in or are forthcoming in Berkeley Poetry Review, New American Writing, Hambone, and elsewhere, and a mixed genre project involving a translation of the late poems of Du Fu, excerpts from which appear in Cha: An Asian Literary Journal and Circumference. [End Page 175]

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