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Notes on Contributors

D.C. Greetham is Professor of English at the Graduate Center of The City University of New York where he teaches bibliography and textual criticism. He was one of the editors of the Clarendon edition of Trevisa's On the Properties of Things and is now general editor of Hoccleve's Regiment of Princes. He is Executive Director of the interdisciplinary Society for Textual Scholarship and co-editor of its journal TEXT.

G. Thomas Tanselle, Vice President of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, teaches bibliography and editing in the Columbia University English Department and is co-editor of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of The Writings of Herman Melville. He is currently president of the Grolier Club and has just completed two terms as president of the Bibliographical Society of America.

Peter L. Shillingsburg is General Editor of a new edition of works by W. M. Thackeray just beginning publication with Garland, author of Scholarly Editing in the Computer Age, and former chairman of the MLA's Committee on Scholarly Editions.

Fredson Bowers is Linden Kent Memorial Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Virginia.

Marion Glasscoe is Lecturer in English Medieval Studies in the University of Exeter where she is general editor of the Exeter Medieval English Texts and Studies Series. She has edited the British Library MS. Sloane 2499 text of Julian of Norwich (Exeter, 1976) and is currently preparing a critical edition of the short and long versions of Julian's work for the Longman Annotated Texts Series.

Ralph Hanna III, Professor of English at the University of California, Riverside, has edited a number of Middle English and Anglo-Latin works; he remains interested in the relationship of book production and literary history.

Roy Vance Ramsey is professor of English at Ohio University. He has published on both medieval and contemporary literature and is currently at work on a study of the Manly-Rickert theory of the relationships among the early manuscripts of the Canterbury Tales.

Kevin K. Cureton is lecturer in English at Princeton University, where he is completing a dissertation on the revision of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde.

A. S. G. Edwards is Professor of English at the University of Victoria,


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British Columbia, General Editor of the Index of Middle English Prose, and Vice President of the Renaissance Text Society. He is currently completing an edition of the English Poems of Thomas More (for the Yale Edition) and co-editing Chaucer's House of Fame (for the Variorum).

David Bevington is Phyllis Fay Horton Professor in the Humanities at the University of Chicago. His Action Is Eloquence: Shakespeare's Language of Gesture appeared in 1984, and the Bantam Shakespeare (complete in 29 paperback volumes) in 1988.

Elizabeth Story Donno is now a Senior Research Associate at the Henry E. Huntington Library, San Marino, Ca.

W. Craig Ferguson is a Professor of English at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, where his interests include typography and printing history. He also teaches his bibliography students to play at quadrats.

Harold Love is Reader in English at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. His most recent publication is The Complete Works of Thomas Southerne with R. J. Jordan. Research for this article was done during the tenure of Munby Fellowship at the University of Cambridge Library.

Stephen K. Wright is Assistant Professor of English at the Catholic University of America. He is the author of The Vengeance of Our Lord: Medieval Dramatizations of the Destruction of Jerusalem, and articles on early English, French. German, Latin, and Swedish drama.

Martin C. Battestin is William R. Kenan Professor of English at the University of Virginia, and has recently completed a biography of Fielding.

Arthur Sherbo, Emeritus Professor of English at Michigan State University, is making a special study of eighteenth-century periodicals.

C. Y. Ferdinand, formerly a member of the ESTC project in London, is editor of the Printing and Bibliographical Studies section of the Eighteenth Century: A Current Bibliography and is presently in Oxford working on a history of the Salisbury Journal in the eighteenth century.

John O. Hayden, Professor of English at the University of California, Davis, has edited William Wordsworth's poetry (1977) and prose (1988) for Penguin Books. He is presently finishing a study of Wordsworth's psychological interests.

Alexander Gourlay is studying Blake's 1809 exhibition and teaching at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln.

Ellen Summers completed her doctorate at the University of North Carolina in 1988, and is now an assistant professor of English at Hiram College. She is currently writing a biographical account of Archibald Henderson for the Dictionary of Literary Biography.

Mary-Elisabeth Fowkes Tobin, an Assistant Professor at the University of Hawaii, has published on a variety of subjects, including eighteenth-century literary studies and new historicism, and is currently writing a book-length study of the Lady's Magazine.