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  • Contributors

Emily Bruce is assistant professor of history at the University of Minnesota, Morris. Her research investigates childhood, gender, and class in modern European history. Her book project is tentatively titled Childhood in Revolution: Reading, Writing, and Agency in German Families, 1770-1850. Recent publications include work on girlhood, children's letter writing, and comparative education in Social Science History, Paedagogica Historica, and the Journal of Modern Chinese History.

Elise Klarenbeek received a BA with distinction in May 2019 from the University of Minnesota, Morris, where she majored in history and minored in English. She is a member of Phi Alpha Theta, the national history honors society, and served as the student representative to the history faculty.

Sandra Fox is a Jim Joseph postdoctoral research fellow at Stanford University in the Concentration in Education and Jewish Studies. Her current research considers Zionist, Yiddishist, and liberal Jewish summer camps in the American postwar period. After receiving her PhD in History and Hebrew Judaic Studies at New York University in 2018, she went on to complete a postdoctoral fellowship at Ben Gurion University. She is the founder and producer of Vaybertaytsh: A Feminist Podcast in Yiddish, and serves on the editorial board of In geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies.

Danni Cai (蔡丹妮) is a PhD candidate in the Department of East Asian Studies at McGill University. Her expertise is in social and cultural history with a focus on history of the book and popular education in China during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. She is currently working on her dissertation, which examines the production, circulation, and evolution of epistolary knowledge in late imperial and Republican China.

Rachel Neiwert is an assistant professor of history at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Morris Brodie completed his PhD at Queen's University Belfast in 2018. His thesis focused on the transatlantic anarchist movement during the Spanish Civil War, using a transnational perspective to explore the links between anarchists in [End Page 177] Britain, Ireland, the United States, and Spain. This forms the basis of his upcoming book, Transatlantic Anarchism during the Spanish Civil War and Revolution, 1936–1939: Fury Over Spain, published by Routledge. His wider research interests include twentieth-century labour and social history, particularly during revolutionary periods. He is currently employed as a teaching assistant in the History Department at Queen's.

Ciara Breathnach is a senior lecturer in history at the University of Limerick and an Irish Research Council Laureate Award holder. She has published widely on the social, gender, and medical history of Ireland.

Sarah-Anne Buckley is a lecturer in history at the National University of Ireland Galway. She has published widely on the social, gender, and childhood history of Ireland. She is previous co-editor of an Irish special edition of the Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, president of the Women's History Association of Ireland (WHAI), and co-director of the Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour and Class (ICHLC). [End Page 178]

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