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  • Notes on contributors

BENJAMIN AUTHERS is Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University's School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet). His research focuses on law and literature, with a particular interest in literature's intersections with Canadian and international human rights. He is the author of A Culture of Rights: Law, Literature, and Canada (University of Toronto Press, 2016; winner of the 2019 Pierre Savard Award) and editor, with Maïté Snauwaert and Daniel Laforest, of Inhabiting Memory in Canadian Literature/Habiter la mémoire dans la littérature canadienne (University of Alberta Press, 2017).

MAEVE CONRICK is Full Professor of French Emeritus and former Principal of the College of Arts and Humanities at University College Dublin. She has published widely in the areas of sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, and Canadian studies. Career distinctions include the Governor General's International Award for Canadian Studies (2017) for outstanding contribution to the scholarship and development of Canadian studies internationally.

ISLA DUNCAN is a research associate at the University of Chichester, where she worked for 12 years in the Department of English Studies. Before that, she taught language education at the University of Strathclyde. She has published articles on several female Canadian writers, among them Alice Munro, Margaret Laurence, and Margaret Atwood. She is the author of Alice Munro's Narrative Art (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).

ESRA MELIKOĞLU is Professor of English at Istanbul University. She is the author of Interactive Voices in Intertextual Literature: The Ex-Centric Female, Child, Servant and Colonised (Tectum, 2004) and critical articles on the servant character and postcolonial and feminist issues. Currently, her research is devoted to the connection between the female gothic and women-authored crime fiction.

CECILE PLANCHON is a research associate at Carleton University. She defended her thesis entitled 'Avec ou sans équivalent: le poids de la définition dans une analyse lexicométrique des anglicismes lexicaux' in January 2019. Her research interests revolve around languages in minority contexts, language interferences, and language attitudes and perceptions. She has previously published in the Journal of French Language Studies, the International Journal of Canadian Studies, and Recherches Amérindiennes au Québec.

AMY SHAW is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Lethbridge. She is the author of Crisis of Conscience: Conscientious Objection in Canada during the First World War (UBC Press, 2009), and the co-editor of two books on women and girls in Canada and Newfoundland during the world wars.

ANDREW SMITH is Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool Management School. He has published a book on the role of investors in the Canadian Confederation and a range of articles on the business histories of a variety of other countries, including the United Kingdom, India, Japan, and the Bahamas.

DANIEL STOCKEMER is a full professor in the School of Political Studies at the University of Ottawa. His research interests are in comparative politics, youth and politics, political representation, and quantitative methods. Daniel has published more than 100 articles, in journals such as Political Behavior, the Canadian Journal of Political Science, and Electoral Studies.

TRACY WHALEN is Associate Professor in the department of Rhetoric, Writing, and Communications at the University of Winnipeg. She is editor for the Canadian journal Rhetor and co-editor of the book Finding McLuhan: The Mind/The Man/The Message (2015). Her current research focuses on public memory, aviation disaster, and the complex relationship between Newfoundland and the United States.

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