University of Virginia Library

Search this document 


  

collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
 1.0. 
collapse section2.0. 
collapse section2.1. 
 2.1a. 
 2.1b. 
collapse section2.2. 
 2.2a. 
 2.2b. 
  

collapse section 
  
[section]
  
  
  
  
  
  

Notes On Contributors

IAN WATT, formerly a fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, is Associate Professor of English at the University of California in Berkeley. He has written on the early eighteenth-century novel, and is now engaged on a study of Joseph Conrad.

OSCAR MAURER, Associate Professor of English at the University of Texas, is completing a book on a group of prominent Victorian editors and their journals. He is the editor of the Library Chronicle of the University of Texas, and since 1955 has been bibliographer for the Victorian Newsletter.

WILLIAM CHARVAT, Professor of English at Ohio State University, is writing a book on the profession of authorship in America.

BRUCE HARKNESS, Associate Professor of English at the University of Illinois, is interested in the relationship of publishing to authorship. He spent the academic year 1957-58 in England as a Guggenheim Fellow studying the publishing firm of Grant Richards (1897-1924).

D. F. MCKENZIE is a graduate of the University of New Zealand. He is now at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and is working on the organization of the Cambridge University Press in the early eighteenth century.

CYRUS HOY received his doctorate from the University of Virginia and is now Assistant Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. This is the fourth part of a monograph on the authorship of the Beaumont and Fletcher canon. A further part will appear in the next volume of these Studies.

R. H. BOWERS is Professor of English at the University of Florida where he teaches seminars in Medieval and Renaissance literature.

ROBERT HAY CARNIE is Lecturer and Head of the English Department of Queen's College, Dundee, in the University of St. Andrews.

RONALD PATERSON DOIG, formerly of the English Department, Queen's College, Dundee, is now attached to the Department of Palaeography in the University of Durham. He is engaged with arranging and cataloguing the Grey papers.

G. E. BENTLEY, JR., Instructor in English at the University of Chicago, is preparing for publication a facsimile and study of Blake's Four Zoas, and,


256

Page 256
with the assistance of a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1958-59, a collection and study of all the known contemporary references to Blake.

WILLIAM B. TODD, whose researches in eighteenth-century bibliography have continually broken new ground, is Associate Professor of English at the University of Texas.

ROBERT K. TURNER, JR., who received his doctorate from the University of Virginia, is Assistant Professor of English at the Virginia Military Institute. He is pursuing research into details of the Elizabethan printing process.

D. F. FOXON, Assistant Keeper in the British Museum, has been active in tracing T. J. Wise's misdemeanors and will shortly publish an account, T. J. Wise, and the Pre-Restoration Drama. He is currently preparing a check-list of English poetical pieces 1701-1750.

ALAN D. MCKILLOP, Professor of English at The Rice Institute, has long been interested in the eighteenth-century novelists, especially Samuel Richardson, and has recently published The Early Masters of English Fiction.

WILLIAM A. COLES has been instructor in English at the University of Virginia and is now Assistant Professor of English at the University of North Carolina. He has in preparation an edition of Miss Mitford's letters.

DAVID BONNELL GREEN, co-bibliographer of the Keats-Shelley Association of America, is Assistant Professor of English at Bryn Mawr College.

EDWIN H. CADY is Professor of English at Syracuse University. Among his publications is a biography of William Dean Howells, the first volume, The Road to Realism, appearing in 1956, and the second, The Realist at War, in 1958.

RUDOLF HIRSCH is the expert on incunabula for the University of Pennsylvania Library.

HOWELL J. HEANEY is Bibliographer in the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia.