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  • Contributors

William B. Taylor is Muriel McKevitt Sonne Professor of History, Emeritus, at the University of California, Berkeley. His recent books include Shrines and Miraculous Images in Mexico Before the Reforma and Marvel and Miracles in Late Colonial Mexico: Three Texts in Context, both published in 2011. He is working on a more comprehensive history of Mexican shrines and their devotees in the colonial period.

Sean F. McEnroe is assistant professor of Latin American and Atlantic History at Southern Oregon University. He is the author of From Colony to Nationhood in Mexico: Laying the Foundations, 1560-1840 (2012) and two articles on colonial environments: "A Sleeping Army: Diplomatic and Civic Structures on the Nahua-Chichimec Frontier" (2011/2012), and "Painting the Philippines with an American Brush" (2003). He is a contributing editor for the Handbook of Latin American Studies and writes for Oxford Bibliographies Online. His current research explores the role of indigenous elites in colonial governance throughout the Americas.

Paul Ramírez is assistant professor of History at Northwestern University. He is on leave for the academic year 2012-2013 as the Dana and David Dornsife Fellow at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, where he is completing a book manuscript on disease prevention during Mexico's enlightenment.

Susan Schroeder is the France Winton Scholes Professor of Colonial Latin American History, Emerita, at Tulane University. She has published extensively on the writings of Chimalpahin and is the general editor, co-editor, and co-translator of the Codex Chimalpahin (1997) and the Series Chimalpahin (2006, 2010). Her publications treat conquest history, indigenous intellectuals, religion, resistance, and women. She is currently working on the Nahua history of Tlacaellel, the man said to be responsible for the glory of the great Mexica Empire. [End Page i]

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