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Hypatia 23.1 (2008) 236-239

Notes on Contributors

Samantha Brennan is Chair of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario, where she is also an affiliated member of the newly formed Department of Women's Studies and Feminist Research. She is editor of Feminist Moral Philosophy, a Canadian Journal of Philosophy supplementary volume, published in June 2003. She also co-edited with Anita Superson, Feminist Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition, a special issue of Hypatia published in Fall 2005. Brennan has authored articles on rights, deontological ethics, feminism, liberalism, death, family justice, and children's rights. (sbrennan@uwo.ca)

Richmond Campbell works in the areas of moral philosophy, epistemology, feminist theory, philosophy of biology, and game theory, and is currently preparing a book on moral judgment. He is George Munro Professor Emeritus in the Philosophy Department at Dalhousie University. (Richmond.Campbell@Dal.Ca)

Dianne Chisholm researches and teaches in areas of modernism and modernity, specializing in literary and cultural theory, feminist theory and women's modernism, queer cultural studies, and ecological and environmental studies. She is author of H. D.'s Freudian Poetics: Psychoanalysis in Translation (1992) and Queer Constellations: Subcultural Space in the Wake of the City (2005). She currently is writing a book called "Nomad Ecology: Landscapes for a New Earth." (chisholm@ualberta.ca)

Lorraine Code is Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy at York University in Toronto, Canada, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. She is the author of Epistemic Responsibility (1987), What Can She Know? Feminist Theory and the Construction of Knowledge (1991), Rhetorical Spaces: Essays on (Gendered) Locations (1995), and Ecological Thinking: The Politics of Epistemic Location (2006). She is General Editor of the Routledge Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories (2000), editor of Feminist Interpretations of Hans-Georg Gadamer (2003), and co-translator with Kathryn Hamer of Michèle Le Dœuff's 1998 Le Sexe du savoir as The Sex of Knowing (2003). (codelb@yorku.ca)

Joanne Faulkner is a Killam Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Alberta, having recently completed her Ph.D. in philosophy at La Trobe University. She has published articles in Diacritics, [End Page 236] Textual Practice, Minerva, and Contretemps, and has a co-authored book about psychoanalysis forthcoming with Acumen. (jfaulkne@ualberta.ca)

Heidi E. Grasswick is Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Middlebury College in Vermont, where she also teaches in the Women's and Gender Studies Program and the Environmental Studies Program. Her primary areas of research are feminist epistemology and social epistemology, and the intersections of epistemology and ethics. Her articles include "Individuals-in-Communities: The Search for a Feminist Model of Epistemic Subjects" (Hypatia, Summer 2004), and "The Impurities of Epistemic Responsibility: Developing a Practice-oriented Epistemology" in Recognition, Responsibility, and Rights: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory (2003). She is currently working on a book on the relationships among individuals and communities in feminist epistemology. (grasswick@middlebury.edu)

Lisa Guenther is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. She is the author of The Gift of the Other: Levinas and the Politics of Reproduction (2006). Her current research explores the relation between politics and singularity in the work of Cavarero, Agamben, Levinas, and others. (l.guenther@auckland.ac.nz)

C. Jacob Hale is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Center for Sex and Gender Research at California State University, Northridge. His research is in interdisciplinary transgender studies. (cjacobhale@sbcglobal.net)

Rebecca Hill received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies at Monash University in 2006. She teaches in the School of Applied Communication at RMIT University (Australia) and is preparing a monograph on the interval in Irigaray, Aristotle, and Bergson. (rebecca.a.hill@rmit.edu.au)

Christine M. Koggel is the Bower Carty Professor of Ethics and Public Affairs and Director of the Centre on Values and Ethics (COVE) at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. She is author of Perspectives on Equality: Constructing a Relational Theory (1998) and editor of the expanded three-volume second edition of Moral Issues in Global Perspective (2006). She is...

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