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Contributors
*Volume 16, Number 1*
/September, 2005/
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David Caplan
David Caplan is Associate Professor of English at Ohio Wesleyan
University and the author of Questions of Possibility:
Contemporary Poetry and Poetic Form (Oxford University Press,
2005) and Poetic Form: An Introduction (Longman, forthcoming).
Back <16.1caplan.html> to article.
Ashley Dawson
Ashley Dawson, Associate Professor of English at the College of
Staten Island/CUNY, is currently Mellon Fellow at the Center for
the Humanities, The Graduate Center, City University of New York.
He is the author of Mongrel Nation: Diasporic Culture and the
Making of Postcolonial Britain (forthcoming from University of
Michigan Press) and co-editor of Contemporary U.S. Culture and
Imperialism (forthcoming from Duke University Press), as well as
of numerous articles on race, nationalism, and postcolonial theory.
Back <16.1dawson.html> to article.
Tim Donovan
Tim Donovan advances his interests in rhetoric and philosophy as
well as print and media literacy at the University of North
Florida. His writing has appeared in Philosophy and Rhetoric and
The Journal of Advanced Composition.
Back <16.1donovan.html> to article.
Lori Emerson
Lori Emerson is a doctoral candidate in the English Department at
SUNY Buffalo, where she is completing a dissertation on
conceptions of space, time and movement in digital poetry. Her
most recent critical work can be found in the Electronic Book
Review, Cybertext Yearbook, and Open Letter. Her essay on
non-Euclidean conceptions of space in digital poetry is
forthcoming in Leonardo Electronic Almanac.
Back <16.1emerson.html> to article.
David Herman
David Herman teaches in the English Department at Ohio State
University. Recent books include Narration in Natural Language (to
be published in Czech in 2005) and Story Logic: Problems and
Possibilities of Narrative, which was published in 2002 in the
Frontiers of Narrative book series that he edits for University of
Nebraska Press. The editor of Narrative Theory and the Cognitive
Sciences (2003) and co-editor (with Manfred Jahn and Marie-Laure
Ryan) of The Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory (2005), he
is currently serving as editor of the forthcoming Cambridge
Companion to Narrative.
Back <16.1herman.html> to article.
Laura Hinton
Laura Hinton is the author of The Perverse Gaze of Sympathy:
Sadomasochistic Sentiments from Clarissa to Rescue 911 (Albany:
SUNY Press, 1999), and co-editor of We Who Love to Be Astonished:
Experimental Women's Writing and Performance Poetics (Tuscaloosa:
U of Alabama Press, 2001). She has published essays, interviews,
and reviews on the topics of experimental writing and film studies
and has published creative non-fiction and poetry in venues
including Feminist Studies and How2. She is currently at work on a
book that studies fetishism and visual-arts media in cross-genre
writing by American women. Laura Hinton is Associate Professor of
English at The City College of New York (CUNY).
Back <16.1hinton.html> to article.
Dalia Judovitz
Dalia Judovitz is a National Endowment for the Humanities
Professor of French at Emory University. She is the author of
Subjectivity and Representation in Descartes: The Origins of
Modernity (1988); Unpacking Duchamp: Art in Transit (1995);
Déplier Duchamp: Passages de l'art (Fr. trans., 2000); and The
Culture of the Body: Genealogies of Modernity (2001). She is also
co-editor of Dialectic and Narrative (1993) and co-editor of a
book series, The Body, in Theory: Histories of Cultural
Materialism, published by the University of Michigan Press.
Back <16.1judovitz.html> to article.
A. Samuel Kimball
A. Samuel Kimball is Associate Professor of English at the
University of North Florida. He has published on American
literature (Hawthorne, Melville, Morrison, Poe), on film (Twin
Peaks, Chinatown, Pulp Fiction, and The Matrix, along with
Terminator 2 and Alien Resurrection), and literary theory. His
book on the infanticidal logic of evolution and culture is
forthcoming from Delaware.
Back <16.1donovan.html> to article.
Derek Nystrom
Derek Nystrom teaches film and cultural studies at McGill
University, where he is Assistant Professor of English. He is
completing a book entitled "Hard Hats, Rednecks, and Macho Men:
Screening Class in 1970s American Cinema."
Back <16.1nystrom.html> to article.
Ben Roberts
Ben Roberts is Lecturer in Media Studies at the University of
Bradford. His research focuses on deconstruction and theoretical
approaches to technology. He is currently working on a book
project entitled "Theory Thinking Technology."
Back <16.1roberts.html> to article.
Andrew Saldino
Andrew Saldino is a Lecturer in the Philosophy and Religion
Department at Clemson University. He is currently completing a
dissertation in the Religion Department at Syracuse University
entitled "Just Speech: Ethics and Essence in the Modern Tradition."
Back <16.1saldino.html> to article.
Jillian Smith
Jillian Smith pursues her interests in documentary film and text,
the politics of spectacle, and materialist and poststructuralist
theory at the University of North Florida, where she is Assistant
Professor.
Back <16.1donovan.html> to article.
Jeffrey J. Williams
Jeffrey J. Williams has published widely on the history of the
novel, contemporary criticism, theories of professionalism, and
the university in both academic and public venues. His books
include Theory and the Novel: Narrative Reflexivity in the British
Tradition (Cambridge, 1998) and The Theory Market: Criticism and
the University (forthcoming), and the edited collections PC Wars:
Politics and Theory in the Academy (Routledge, 1995), The
Institution of Literature (SUNY P, 2002), and Critics at Work:
Interviews, 1993-2003 (NYU P, 2004). He is also an editor of The
Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism (2001) and, since 1992,
has been editor of the minnesota review. He is currently Professor
of English at Carnegie Mellon University.
Back <16.1williams.html> to article.
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/Last Modified: Monday, 21-Nov-2005 09:12:52 EST/