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  • Notes on Contributors

Stephanie Boland is a first year PhD student at the University of Exeter, where her research focuses on travel and regionalism in literary modernism.

Stefan Hawlin has published widely on nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature, and is one of the editors of The Poetical Works of Robert Browning (OUP). He is Professor of English at the University of Buckingham.

Michael D. Hurley is a Lecturer in English at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of St Catharine’s College.

R. L. P. Jackson is retired. Formerly a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Sydney, he still enjoys reading, re-reading and thinking about books, especially good ones.

Freya Johnston is an editor of The Cambridge Quarterly.

Vidya Ravi completed her doctoral study at Queens’ College, Cambridge and has recently taken up a postdoctoral position at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. Her research concerns ruins, borderlands and frontiers in contemporary American fiction.

Anis Shivani’s recent books include My Tranquil War and Other Poems (NYQ Books, 2012), The Fifth Lash and Other Stories (C&R Press, 2012), and Anatolia and Other Stories (Black Lawrence Press, 2009). Works in progress include a novel, ‘Abruzzi, 1936’; a poetry collection, ‘Empire’; and a book of criticism called ‘Plastic Realism: Neoliberal Discourse in New American Fiction’. A novel, Karachi Raj, is forthcoming in 2014.

Devani Singh is a PhD candidate and Gates Cambridge Scholar at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Her research focuses on the history of the book and the Renaissance reading of medieval authors, particularly Chaucer.

Jennifer Upton is a doctoral student at Clare Hall, Cambridge. Her research focuses on literary non-fiction in South Africa. [End Page 97]

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