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  • Contributors

carolin lange (carolin.lange@blfd.bayern.de) studied German literature and modern and ancient history. She received her PhD in 2011, and held postdoctoral positions at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and at the University of Washington. She is currently a senior provenance researcher at the Office for Nonstate Museums in Bavaria, Germany.

daniel nolan (dnolan@d.umn.edu) is an assistant professor of German at the University of Minnesota, Duluth. He has published on mobile language learning, and his current research focuses on the aesthetics of public culture, collaborative international learning, and language learning game development.

qinna shen (qshen@brynmawr.edu) is an assistant professor of German at Bryn Mawr College. Her research has focused on German studies (twentieth century), film studies, and Asian German studies. She is the author of The Politics of Magic: DEFA Fairy-Tale Films and the coeditor of Beyond Alterity: German Encounters with Modern East Asia.

billy badger (billy.badger@utas.edu.au) is a senior lecturer in German Studies at the University of Tasmania. He has published widely on contemporary German-language literature, with a particular focus on spoken-word poetry. His most recent book is Bas Böttcher. Text, Bild und Kommunikation.

mareike herrmann (mherrmann@wooster.edu) is professor and chair of German and Russian Studies and affiliate faculty in Film Studies at the College of Wooster. Her research has focused on German film, popular culture in postwar and postunification Germany, and on exile and migration. Herrmann's current book project is on issues of space, gender, and migration in German film since 2000.

thomas beebee (tob@psu.edu) is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of German and Comparative Literature at the Pennsylvania State University. His most recent books are Transmesis: Inside Translation's Black Box (Palgrave-MacMillan, 2012) and the edited volume German Literature as World Literature (Bloomsbury, 2014). Beebee is editor in chief of the journal Comparative Literature.

john pizer (pizerj@lsu.edu) is a professor of German and comparative literature and chair of the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at Louisiana State University. His most recent books are The Idea of World Literature: History and Pedagogical Practice (2006) and Imagining the Age of Goethe in German Literature, 1970–2010 (2011).

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