In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Contributors RITA COLANZI completed her Ph.D. in English at Temple University. She tcaches in the Department of English at West Chester University and is working currently on a book-length study of Tennessee Williams's plays. ALLISON HERSH is a graduate student at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is currently working on a dissertation on feminism, postrnodernism, and the epic genre. CHRISTOPHER INNES, Co-Editor of Modern Drama, is Professor of English al York University and General Editor of both the "Directors in Perspective" series for Cambridge University Press and ''The Canadian Playwright" series for Simon and Pierre. He has published widely on theatre and drama: his most recent book is Modern British Drama 189frI990. RANDI S. KOPPEN is Research Fellow at the Department of English, University of Bergen. She is currently at work on a doctoral thesis on Feminist Drama. ILONA S. KOREN~DEUTSCH is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Theatre and Drama and a certificate in African Studies at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL. She has previously studied at the University of Pennsylvania, King's College, London and Indiana University. DEBRA lvlALINA is a Ph.D. student in English at Boston College. WILLIAM E. H. MEYER, JR. has published academic articles, poetry, and art in many journals throughout the world. He has been a guest lecturer at the Hemingway Symposium in San Diego and at the summer Faulkner Conference in Oxford, MS. Contributors 493 MERVYN NfCHOLSON is Chair of the Department of English and Modern Languages at University College of the Cariboo. He has published articles in a wide variety of journals. JOHN SHOUT tcaches drama and film at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh . He has published articles recently on Marc Blitzstein. John Huston's The Dead, and dramatic depictions of the Spanish Civil Wcrr and is at work on a study of the political theatre of the 19305. ALAN THOMAS teaches modern drama, among other things, at Scarborough College, University of Toronto. He is the author of The Expanding Eye, a discussion of early uses of the camera, and creator of a television series on Ontario TV, Victorians. ...

pdf

Share