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  • Notes on Contributors

Bonnie Costello is William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor and Professor of English Emerita at Boston University. She is the author of many books and articles on modern poetry, most recently The Plural of Us: Poetry and Community in Auden and Others (Princeton UP, 2017).

Stuart Hart is Head of English at Solihull School. He recently completed a PhD at the University of Birmingham on Soteriology in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene.

Diarmuid Hester is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in English at the University of Cambridge, where he is writing a counter history of New York art and culture from the vantage point of waste.

Michael Kalisch was recently awarded his PhD in English from the University of Cambridge.

Raphael Lyne is an editor of The Cambridge Quarterly.

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.

Gabriel Roberts studied English at the universities of Cambridge and Oxford. He now teaches English at a secondary school in London.

Christopher Spaide is a lecturer in the English department at Harvard University. His essays and reviews have appeared or are forthcoming in College Literature, Poetry, and The Yale Review.

Eileen Sperry is a Visiting Assistant Professor of English at the College of Saint Rose, Albany, NY. Her research and teaching interests include early modern lyric, poetic theory, and cultures of embodiment. Her current project explores decay, mortality, and selfhood in early modern English verse.

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