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Contributors
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Contributors Richard Cavell is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia and the author of McLuhan in Space: A Cultural Geography; the editor of Love, Hate and Fear in Canada’s Cold War; and the co-editor, with Peter Dickinson, of Sexing the Maple: A Canadian Sourcebook; as well as more than seventy chapters, articles, and reviews. Eva Darias-Beautell is Associate Professor of American and Canadian literatures at the University of La Laguna, Spain. Her books include Shifting Sands: Literary Theory and Contemporary Canadian Fiction and Graphies and Grafts: (Con)Texts and (Inter)Texts in the Fictions of Four Canadian Women Writers, which was chosen by the International Council for Canadian Studies as one of the “30 most notable books in Canadian Studies.” She is the co-editor, with María Jesús Hernáez Lerena, of Canon Disorders: Gendered Perspectives on Literature and Film in Canada and the United States, and is currently directing the research project “The City, Urban Cultures and Sustainable Literatures: Representations of the Anglo-Canadian Post-Metropolis ,” with the participation of scholars from Canada, the UK, and Spain. AnaMaríaFraile-Marcos is Associate Professor of English at the University of Salamanca, Spain, where she teaches Canadian Literature. Among her current research interests are the interconnections between racialization and the urban milieu in Canadian literature. Forthcoming is the collection of essays The Glocal City in Canadian Literature (Routledge). Other recent publications include the books Richard Wright’s Native Son (2007) and Planteamientos estéticos y políticos en la obra de Zora Neale Hurston (2003), as well as articles about African American and African Canadian writing. 2 2 5 2 2 6 c o n t r i b u t o r s María Jesús Hernáez Lerena is Associate Professor of American and Canadian literatures at the University of La Rioja, Spain. She is author of the books Exploración de un Género Literario: Los Relatos Breves de Alice Munro (1998), Short Story World: The Nineteenth-Century American Masters (2003), and co-author of Story Time: Exercises in the Study of American Literature for Advanced Students of English (1999). She co-edited the volume Canon Disorders: Gendered Perspectives on Literature and Film in Canada and the United States (2007) with Eva Darias-Beautell. She is currently at work on a book on the literature of Newfoundland and Labrador. Coral Ann Howells is Professor Emerita of English and Canadian Literature , University of Reading, England, and Senior Research Fellow, Institute of English Studies, University of London. She has lectured and published extensively on contemporary Canadian women’s fiction in English. Her books include Margaret Atwood (1997; second edition 2005), Alice Munro (1998), and Contemporary Canadian Women’s Fiction (2003). She is editor of the Cambridge Companion to Margaret Atwood (2006), and co-editor with Eva-Marie Kroller of the Cambridge History of Canadian Literature (2009). She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and is currently coediting a volume of the Oxford History of the Novel in English. Smaro Kamboureli is Professor and Canada Research Chair Tier 1 at the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph. Her publications include Scandalous Bodies: Diasporic Literature in English Canada, and her co-edited volumes, Trans.Can.Lit: Resituating the Study of Canadian Literature, Shifting the Ground of Canadian Literary Studies, and Retooling the Humanities: The Culture of Research in Canadian Universities . She is the founder and Director of TransCanada Institute. Michèle Lacombe is Associate Professor in the Canadian Studies and Indigenous Studies Departments at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario. Relevant recent work addresses Indigenous literary criticism, in Littératures autochtones, edited by Maurizio Gatti and Louis-Jacques Dorais (2010); Haisla fiction writer Eden Robinson, in International Journal of Canadian Studies 41.1 (2010); and Huron-Wendat dramatist Yves Sioui Durand, in Indigeneity in Dialogue: Indigenous Literary Expression Across the Linguistic Divides. She co-edited a special section of Studies in Canadian Literature (35.2, 2010), with Heather MacFarlane and Jennifer Andrews, and addressed Acadian misapprehensions of Mi’kmaw culture in Open Letter: A Canadian Journal of Writing and Theory 14: 6 (2011). [3.137.218.215] Project MUSE (2024-04-17 13:27 GMT) c o n t r i b u t o r s 2 2 7 Belén Martín-Lucas teaches Postcolonial, Diasporic, and Gender Studies at the University of Vigo, Spain. She has co-edited several volumes on globalization and...