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Notes on Contributors
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Notes on Contributors

DAVID L. VANDER MEULEN, Associate Professor of English at the University of Virginia, has been a member of the faculty there since 1984 and a Councilor of the University's Bibliographical Society since 1986. He currently is preparing a publishing history and descriptive bibliography of Alexander Pope's Dunciad.

G. THOMAS TANSELLE is Vice President of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and Adjunct Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. As president of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, he will preside over the Society's fiftieth-anniversary festivities in April, and in May he will deliver the Sandars Lectures at Cambridge University.

DAVID L. GANTS is an Academic Professional at the University of Georgia where he develops computer-assisted teaching and research tools for the Department of English. He is also the project director for the on-line version of Studies in Bibliography and electronic editor for a new edition of the works of Ben Jonson (Oxford University Press).

ELIZABETH K. LYNCH is Assistant to the Editor of Studies in Bibliography.

MARCEL DE SMEDT is Professor of Methodology of Germanic Philology and campus librarian of the Faculty of Arts at the Catholic University of Louvain (Belgium). For his doctoral dissertation he studied the historiography of Dutch literature in Belgium in the nineteenth century. He has published on the historiography of literature, textual criticism, bibliography, and librarianship.

LEE BLISS is a Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the author of The World's Perspective: John Webster and the Jacobean Drama, Francis Beaumont, and articles on Shakespeare, Webster, Chapman, Beaumont, Fletcher, Renaissance dramatic genres, and sixteenth- and seventeenth-century retellings of the Griselda story. She is currently at work on an edition of Coriolanus for the New Cambridge Shakespeare.

H. DIACK JOHNSTONE is Tutorial Fellow in Music at St Anne's College, Oxford, and a lecturer also in the Faculty of Music there. An authority on the music of Handel's English contemporaries, he is a member of the Editorial Committee of Musica Britannica, and editor/part author of volume 4 in the Blackwell History of Music in Britain (Oxford, 1990), the first-ever book devoted solely to music in eighteenth-century Britain.

FREDERICK G. RIBBLE is an independent scholar who has published several articles on Fielding. He and his wife Anne G. Ribble have recently completed


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a book-length annotated catalogue of Fielding's library based on the auction catalogue of 1755.

MARTIN C. BATTESTIN is William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of English at the University of Virginia. He is editor of Smollett's translation of Don Quixote, forthcoming in the authoritative Georgia Edition of Smollett's Works.

EMILY LORRAINE DE MONTLUZIN is Professor of History at Francis Marion University in Florence, South Carolina. She is author of The Anti-Jacobins, 1798-1800: The Early Contributors to the "Anti-Jacobin Review" (London, 1988) as well as articles on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British press history.

DAVID CHANDLER is a graduate student at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, completing a doctoral thesis entitled "Norwich Literature and its Context, 1788-97." He has published many articles and scholarly notes on various aspects of the Romantic Period and on Shakespeare.

PROFESSOR G. E. BENTLEY, JR., of University College, University of Toronto, is the author of Blake Records (1969) and its Supplement (1988), Blake Books (1977) and its Supplement (1995), and William Blake's Writings, 2 vols. (1978), and is currently writing a biography of Blake, as well as working on printed English Bible illustrations 1539-1830 and Robert Bowyer and the illustration of National History ca. 1800.

PAMELA DALZIEL is Assistant Professor of English at the University of British Columbia. She has edited for Clarendon Press Thomas Hardy: The Excluded and Collaborative Stories (1992) and (with Michael Millgate) Thomas Hardy's `Studies, Specimens &c.' Notebook (1994). Her current projects include the Clarendon edition of Dickens's Hard Times and a study of the visual representation of Hardy's works.

ARTHUR SHERBO is Emeritus Professor of English at Michigan State University. His book Henry James and the Periodicals will be published sometime this year.

JAMES A. RIDDELL is Professor of English at California State University, Dominguez Hills.