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  • Contributors

Christine Allison is Ibrahim Ahmed Professor of Kurdish Studies at the University of Exeter. Her publications include The Yezidi Oral Tradition in Iraqi Kurdistan (Curzon, 2001) and Remembering the Past in Iranian Societies (Harrassowitz, 2013) (coeditor with Philip G. Kreyenbroek). (C.Allison@exeter.ac.uk)

Guy Beiner is a Senior Lecturer in History at Ben Gurion University of the Negev and is presently Gerda Henkel Foundation Marie Curie Fellow at the Faculty of History in the University of Oxford and a Research Associate of St. Catherine’s College. His book Remembering the Year of the French: Irish Folk History and Social Memory (University of Wisconsin Press, 2007) won numerous awards. (gbeiner@bgu.ac.il)

Monica Black is an Asistant Professor of History at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Her first book, Death in Berlin: From Weimar to Divided Germany (Cambridge University Press) was published in 2010. (mblack9@utk.edu)

Sara J. Brenneis is an Assistant Professor of Spanish at Amherst College in Massachusetts. Her monograph, entitled Genre Fusion: A New Approach to History, Fiction and Memory in Contemporary Spain, is forthcoming from Purdue University Press. She is currently working on a study of Spanish written and cinematic representations of Mauthausen from 1945 to the present. (sbrenneis@amherst.edu)

Caroline Wake is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Centre for Modernism Studies in Australia at the University of New South Wales. She is the coeditor, with Bryoni Trezise, of the forthcoming book Visions and Revisions: Performance, Memory, Trauma (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press). Her current research considers the role of testimony in legal, theatrical and visual cultures. (c.wake@unsw.edu.au) [End Page 182]

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