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277 u Contributors Enric Bou is Professor of Hispanic Studies at Brown University. His teaching and research interests cover a broad range of twentieth-century Spanish Peninsular and Catalan literature involving poetry, autobiography, city and literature, and Spanish film. His latests books are Daliccionario: Objetos, mitos y símbolos de Salvador Dalí (2004) and the edition of Pedro Salinas’ Obras Completas (2007). Jennifer Duprey is Assistant Professor of Spanish in the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures at Rutgers University. Her areas of research and teaching are Modern and Contemporary Spanish Peninsular Literatures with a special interest in Spanish and Catalan Cultural Studies. Her work currently engages narratives of violence, justice, and memory in Peninsular Spanish literatures. Gonzalo Goytisolo Gil, whose painting is shown on the cover, was born in Barcelona (1966), where he currently lives. He is the son of the novelist Luis Goytisolo, and a disciple of the realist painter Antonio López García. More information on his work is available at www.gonzalogoytisolo.com. Kirsty Hooper teaches Galician and Spanish at the University of Liverpool, UK. She has published widely on Galician and Spanish literary and cultural studies. Her recent publications include A Stranger in My Own Land: Sofía Casanova, a Spanish Writer in the European Fin de Siècle (2008) and a co-edited volume: Reading Iberia: Theory, History, Identity (2007). Stewart King is Senior Lecturer in Spanish and Catalan Studies at Monash University , Australia. He has published extensively on twentieth-century Spanish and Catalan authors. His most recent publications include Escribir la catalanidad (2005)ººand two edited volumes: La cultura catalana de expresión castellana (2005) and Beyond the Periphery: Narratives of Identity in the Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia, a special issue of Antípodas: Journal of Hispanic and Galician Studies (2007). He is 278 NEW SPAIN, NEW LITERATURES currently writing a book-length study on cultural and national identities in crime fiction from Spain. Jon Kortazar is Professor of Basque Literature at the Universidad del País Vasco-­ Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea. He is the author of several books on twentieth-­ century Basque literature, including Euskal Literatura XX. mendean (six editions, 1990–2003), Teoría y práctica poética de Esteban Urkiaga, Lauaxeta (1986), Luma eta lurra (1997), La pluma y la tierra (1999), La literatura vasca en la transición: Bernardo Atxaga (2003), and La narrativa vasca, hoy: Una mirada desde la postmodernidad (2003). Germán Labrador Méndez is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Spanish Literature at Princeton University. His research interests include postdictatorial Spanish cultural studies, the Avant-Garde and Modernity in Spain, and twentieth-century Spanish literature. His most recent publication is Letras arrebatadas : Poesía y química en la transición española (2008). Laura Lonsdale is Fellow of The Queen’s College, Oxford, where she teaches modern Spanish language and literature. Her forthcoming book Fiction, Feminism and Form is to be published by Tamesis (Boydell and Brewer) in 2010. Her research interests include contemporary narrative and the relationship between politics and literary criticism. María del Pilar Lozano Mijares received her Ph.D. from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and currently works at the BBVA Foundation. She has written articles on contemporary Spanish fiction and is the author of a book-length study, La novela española posmoderna (2007). Luis Martín-Estudillo is Assistant Professor of Spanish Literature at the University of Iowa. His latest publications include La mirada elíptica: El trasfondo barroco de la poesía española contemporánea (2007) and the co-edited volumes Hispanic Baroques: Reading Cultures in Context (2005) and Post-Authoritarian Cultures: Spain and Latin America’s Southern Cone (2008). He is currently working on a book-length study entitled Europe Undreamt: Spanish Culture on the Edges of Modernity. He is an Associate Editor of the Hispanic Issues series and Hispanic Issues Online (HIOL). Jonathan Mayhew is Professor of Spanish at the University of Kansas. He is the author of numerous articles and four books on Spanish poetry: Claudio Rodríguez and the Language of Poetic Vision (1990), The Poetics of Self-Consciousness:­ Twentieth-Century Spanish Poetry (1994), The Twilight of the Avant-Garde: Spanish Poetry 1980–2000 (2009), and Apocryphal Lorca: Translation, Parody, Kitsch (2009). His current project is Fragments of a Late Modernity: Spanish Poetry from García Lorca to García Valdés. [3.17.154.171] Project MUSE (2024-04-26 08:16 GMT) CONTRIBUTORS 279 Gonzalo Navajas is...

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