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Barbara Biesecker (Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh) is associate professor of communication studies at the University of Iowa and author of Addressing Postmodernity:Kenneth Burke,Rhetoric,and a Theory of Social Change (University of Alabama Press). Her work has also appeared in Philosophy and Rhetoric and the Quarterly Journal of Speech. Stephen Howard Browne (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin) is professor of speech communication at Pennsylvania State University and the author of Angelina Grimké: Rhetoric, Identity and the Radical Imagination (Michigan State University Press), Edmund Burke and the Discourse of Virtue (University of Alabama Press), and coeditor of Readings on the Rhetoric of Social Protest (Strata). He is also editor of the journal Philosophy and Rhetoric. Edward S. Casey (Ph.D., Northwestern University) is professor of philosophy at the State University of New York,Stony Brook.He is the author of Remembering:A Phenomenological Study (Indiana University Press),Getting Back into Place (Indiana University Press),and The Fate of Place:A Philosophical History (University of California Press). Rosa A. Eberly (Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University) is associate professor in the departments of Communication Arts and Sciences and of English at Pennsylvania State University.She is the author of CitizenCritics: Literary Public Spheres (University of Illinois Press) and coauthor of Elements of Reasoning (Allyn and Bacon). Contributors Horst-Alfred Heinrich (Ph.D.and Habilitation,Justus-Liebig University ) is senior lecturer at Justus-Liebig-Universitaet, Giessen, Germany, and writes on fascism, the politics of memory, national identity, and collective stereotyping. His recent book, Collective Memories of the Germans, is based on survey data testing the relationship between remembrances on the micro and macro levels among different German subgroups. Amos Kiewe (Ph.D., Ohio University) is chair and associate professor of speech communication at Syracuse University. He is the coauthor of A Shining City on a Hill (Praeger), coeditor of Actor,Ideologue,Politician:The Public Speeches of Ronald Reagan (Greenwood), and editor of The Modern Presidency and Crisis Rhetoric (Praeger). Charles E.Morris III (Ph.D.,Pennsylvania State University) is assistant professor of communication studies at Vanderbilt University.His work has been published in Quarterly Journal of Speech and Women’s Studies in Communication , and he is the coeditor of Readings on the Rhetoric of Social Protest (Strata). Kendall R. Phillips (Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University) is associate professor of speech communication at Syracuse University. His previous publications include Testing Controversy: A Rhetoric of Educational Reform (Hampton Press) and essays in such journals as Philosophy and Rhetoric, Literature/Film Quarterly, and Communication Monographs. Barry Schwartz (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is professor of sociology at the University of Georgia. His recent work on collective memory includes Abraham Lincoln and the Forge of National Memory (University of Chicago Press). He is working on a second volume about Lincoln, tracing his place in American memory from 1930 to the present. His research on American and German judgments of the past is part of a broader series of studies involving Korea, Japan, China, and Israel. Charles E. Scott (Ph.D.,Yale University) is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Philosophy at Pennsylvania State University and the author of TheTime of Memory (SUNY Press), On the Advantages and Disadvantages of Ethics and 268 / Contributors Politics (Indiana University Press), and The Question of Ethics: Nietzsche, Heidegger,Foucault (Indiana University Press). BradfordVivian (Ph.D.,Pennsylvania State University) is assistant professor of communication studies at Vanderbilt University. His work has appeared in Philosophy and Rhetoric and Western Journal of Communication. Barbie Zelizer (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is Raymond Williams Term Chair and associate professor ofcommunicationsattheAnnenberg School of Communications, University of Pennsylvania, and the author of Covering the Body:The Kennedy Assassination,the Media,and the Shaping of Collective Memory (University of Chicago Press) and RememberingtoForget: Holocaust Memory through the Camera’s Eye (University of Chicago Press). She also edited Visual Culture and the Holocaust (Rutgers University Press). Contributors / 269 ...

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