; Contributor Notes, PMC 14.3
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Notes on
Contributors

Volume 14, Number 3
May, 2004

    David Alvarez

    David Alvarez teaches courses on contemporary international literature in the English Department and in the Latin American Studies Program at Grand Valley State University, in Allendale, Michigan. He has published articles on South African literature and photography and on Latin American cultural critique, as well as on nationalism and colonialism in his native Gibraltar. At present, he is investigating the contribution that South African literature and cultural theory can make to cross-cultural everyday life studies.

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    Anustup Basu

    Anustup Basu is a Cultural Studies Pre-doctoral Fellow in the Department of English at the University of Pittsburgh. His essays have been published or are forthcoming in Critical Quarterly; Mute, an anthology on Indian film music published by University of Minnesota Press; and Radical Review of Political Economy. He is at present completing a doctoral dissertation on the concept of geo-televisuality and Indian cinema of the nineties.

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    Pelagia Goulimari

    Pelagia Goulimari teaches part-time at the University of Oxford. She is the editor of Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities (Routledge). She has published articles in Angelaki, Textual Practice, Hypatia: Journal of Feminist Philosophy, and elsewhere. She is currently editing What Moment? Key Theorists Reconsider Postmodernism (Manchester UP, 2005) and Event Gilles Deleuze (Manchester UP, 2005).

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    Jason B. Jones

    Jason B. Jones is Assistant Professor of English at Central Connecticut State University, where he teaches Victorian literature. He has published articles on Arnold Bennett and Wilhelm Reich and is completing a manuscript entitled "Lost Causes: Psychoanalysis and Victorian Literature."

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    Stuart Kendall

    Stuart Kendall writes, edits, and translates in the areas of critical theory, poetics, and visual culture. His edition of Georges Bataille's writings on prehistoric art and culture, The Cradle of Humanity, will be published by Zone Books in 2005. He lives in Lexington, Kentucky.

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    Michael S. Martin

    Michael S. Martin is a doctoral candidate in the English department at Temple University, where he teaches in the American Studies and English programs. His essays and reviews have appeared in the "Dictionary of Literary Biography," "The Henry James E-Journal," and "Green Letters." His recent projects include examining the role and function of nature and modernity in Heidegger's early work, as well as a phenomenological interpretation of Melville's Moby Dick.

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    Saul Newman

    Saul Newman is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow and Lecturer in Politics at the University of Western Australia. His research is in the area of radical political and social theory, particularly that which is informed by perspectives such as poststructuralism, discourse analysis, and psychoanalytic theory. He has written extensively on post-anarchist theory and anti-authoritarian politics generally, including From Bakunin to Lacan: Anti-authoritarianism and the Dislocation of Power (2001) and Unstable Universalities: Poststructuralism and Radical Politics (forthcoming 2005).

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    Robert Payne

    Robert Payne received his Ph.D. from the University of Sydney in 2003. His dissertation, entitled "Emission: Fictions of the Televisual," analyzes constructions of mediated subjectivity in the fiction of Bret Easton Ellis, on talk show TV, and on the Internet. He currently teaches in the School of Humanities at the University of Western Sydney and is working on research around memory, contagion, and popularity in cyberspace.

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    Gillian Pierce

    Gillian Pierce is Associate Professor of French in the Department of Foreign Languages at Ashland University, where she teaches courses in French language, literature, film, and culture. She coedited Contemporary German Editorial Theory in the University of Michigan Press series on editorial theory and literary criticism and is currently at work on a book on Diderot's Salons and the postmodern museum.

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    Caleb Smith

    Caleb Smith is a doctoral candidate in English at Duke University. His essays and stories have appeared in Bomb Magazine, Red Rock Review, and Berkeley Fiction Review, and his interview with Michael Hardt is forthcoming in minnesota review. His dissertation, "The Meaning of Solitude: Modern Prisons and the Art of Escape," explores the emergence of solitary confinement and the imaginative life of the prison cell in modern U.S. theories and figures of subjectivity.

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    Andy Weaver

    Andy Weaver is a doctoral candidate in English at the University of Alberta. He is currently finishing his dissertation on indeterminacy in contemporary Canadian and American experimental poetry. He has also published poetry in various magazines, and his first full-length book of poetry, entitled were the bees, will be published by NeWest Press in Spring 2005.

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