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  • Contributors

Timothy P. Caron is an associate professor of American literature in the English department at California State University, Long Beach, where he teaches nineteenth- and twentieth-century American literature. He has published essays on Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Wright, and Cormac McCarthy, and has forthcoming essays on Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner that will appear in two separate upcoming volumes of essays devoted their work. He has also published Struggles Over the Word: Race and Religion in O'Connor, Faulkner, Hurston, and Wright with Mercer University Press. Currently he is working on a book length manuscript on the critical reception of William Faulkner.

Cheryl Cassidy is a Professor of English at Eastern Michigan University where she teaches courses in rhetoric and composition. She has published essays on missionary women in Victorian Periodicals Review and in Nineteenth Century Feminisms. Her book, India 1830-1930 in the series Women and Empire 1750-1930: Primary Sources on Gender and Anglo-Imperialism is forthcoming from Routledge and was funded through a research grant from Harvard University.

Linda Naranjo-Huebl obtained a Ph.D. in English at the University of Colorado at Boulder, specializing in nineteenth-century woman's literature. She is currently an assistant professor of English at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, teaching American, American Ethnic, and women's literature.

Megan Williams is a graduate student in American Studies at the University of Kansas. Her scholarship deals with war-era representations of Lena Horne in popular culture and examines constructions of identity and difference in visual and print media during the 1940's. [End Page iv]

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