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Notes on Contributors Olga Volkova defended her dissertation, “Historicity and the Ro­ mantic Novel in Britain and Russia,” in the Fall of 2013. She gradu­ ated with a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University in May 2014, and will join the English Department at Xi’an JiaotongLiverpool University as an Assistant Professor in the Spring of 201$. Yohei Igarashi is Assistant Professor ofEnglish at the University of Connecticut. He is currently working on a book called The Poetry Channel from which the essay in this issue derives, as well as a project on the relation between reading research and literary criticism in the twentieth century. Sara L. Pearson is Associate Professor ofEnglish at Trinity Western University. Her current research and publications focus on the use of allusion in English literature and the relationship of gender and reli­ gion in nineteenth-century literature, particularly in the works of Charlotte Bronte. YOUNG-OK An is an Associate Professor ofEnglish at the University of St. Thomas, Minnesota. Among her publications are articles on the Shelleys and Byron. An’s book project, “Becoming Promethea,” in­ vestigates Romantic revisions of Prometheanism in Blake, Byron, the Shelleys, Wollstonecraft, Felicia Hemans, and Letitia Landon. An is working on another project investigating the intertextuality of Hemans and Landon. Mary Anne Myers is Assistant Professor of English at the United States Military Academy, West Point. Her book project examines how poetry became a proxy for love in the Romantic era, starting with the readings and revisions ofPetrarch by Charlotte Smith and Mary Rob­ inson and tracing the development of Petrarchan affects in writing by William Wordsworth, John Keats, Felicia Hemans, and Percy Bysshe Shelley. Her work has also appeared in The Keats-ShelleyJournal. Matthew C. Borushko is Assistant Professor ofEnglish at Stonehill College. He is at work on a book titled Shelley’s Romantic Non­ violence: Aesthetics and Politics in an Age of Revolution. Sibylle Erle, Senior Lecturer in English, co-edited Science, Technol­ ogy and the Senses (2008), wrote Blake, Lavater and Physiognomy (2010), 287 ...

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