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  • Contributors

S.E. JACKSON (sarajackson@umass.edu) is assistant professor of German Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and cofounder of GTPR: German Theater and Performance Research. Her research focuses on theater, performance, and feminist cultural history. She is completing a book on the actress in modern German theater and thought.

AELEAH SOINE (ahs3@stmarys-ca.edu) has a PhD in history from the University of Minnesota and is an associate professor at Saint Mary's College of California. Her research interests include gender, transnational movements, nursing, and citizenship in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, which are drawn together in her current manuscript project, Nursing Sisters.

ERIKS BREDOVSKIS (eriks.bredovskis@mail.utoronto.ca) is a PhD candidate in the Department of History at the University of Toronto. His dissertation examines German anxiety about the US empire from the 1880s to 1920. He is also interested in oral histories of diaspora Latvians living in Canada.

ABBY ANDERTON (abby.anderton@baruch.cuny.edu) is an assistant professor of music at Baruch College, City University of New York. Her recent book, Rubble Music: Occupying the Ruins of Postwar Berlin, examines the capital's musical culture immediately after the fall of the Third Reich. Her research interests include post-catastrophic music-making, performance and Holocaust testimony, and female composers.

TYLER WHITNEY (trwhit@umich.edu) is an associate professor in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He has published articles on sound, media, and nineteenth and twentieth-century German literature. His first book, Literary Modernism as Sonic Warfare, appeared in 2019 with Northwestern UP.

A. DANA WEBER (aweber@fsu.edu) is an assistant professor of German in the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics at Florida State University. She is author of Blood Brothers and Peace Pipes. Performing the Wild West in German Festivals (2019) and editor of the essay collection Performativity—Life, Stage, Screen. Reflections on a Transdisciplinary Concept (2018).

JOE PERRY (jbperry@gsu.edu) is associate professor of modern German and European history at Georgia State University. He is currently writing a book about the Berlin Love Parade and German electronic dance music. His first book Christmas in Germany: A Cultural History appeared in 2010.

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