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Notes on Contributors
  
  
  
  
  
  

Notes on Contributors

Giles Dawson, Professor of English at Catholic University, is now editing a selection of the Bagot letters from the Folger Library manuscripts.

G. Thomas Tanselle, Professor of English in the University of Wisconsin, is Bibliographical Editor of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of The Writings of Herman Melville and is preparing a checklist of material on American printing and publishing.

Hans Walter Gabler pursued bibliographical studies at the University of Virginia on a Harkness Fellowship 1968-70, and he has returned to Munich, where he teaches at the University.

Keith I. D. Maslen, Senior Lecturer in English, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, is editing the Bowyer printing ledgers 1710-75 for the Bibliographical Society (London). He also runs a "bibliographical" press, using a royal Columbian hand-press.

Joan Stevens of Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand, has written on Thackeray, Dickens, the Bröntes, and New Zealand literature. She is now editing the letters of Mary Taylor, Charlotte Brönte's friend.

Robert A. Rees teaches American literature at UCLA and is currently co-editing Washington Irving's The Adventures of Captain Bonneville and a collection of bibliographic essays on American authors to 1900.

Marjorie Griffin is an administrative assistant in the Center for the Study of Comparative Folklore and Mythology at UCLA. She is a fiction writer, having published one novel under a pseudonym.

Michael Rudick teaches medieval and renaissance literature at the University of Utah.

Robert Fehrenbach, Associate Professor of English at William and Mary, has surveyed scholarship on Thomas Nashe for Recent Studies in Renaissance Drama and is making a concordance of the works of Marlowe in connection with Bowers' Cambridge edition.

Albert Wertheim of Indiana University is writing a critical study of James Shirley's plays.


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Henry L. Snyder, author of a number of articles on politics and press in Augustan England, is editor of the Marlborough-Godolphin Correspondence to be published by the Clarendon press. He is Associate Professor of History at the University of Kansas.

Pat Rogers of King's College, London, has a book on Grub Street forthcoming from Methuen and is a contributor to Volume II of the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature. He is now at work on a study of Defoe: The Critical Heritage.

Leonid Arinshtein is a Russian scholar, living in Leningrad, who writes mainly about Victorian poetry.

S. W. Reid, who teaches at Kent State University, is completing a dissertation at the University of Virginia.

Guy R. Woodall has written various essays on Robert Walsh and the American Review. He teaches in the Department of English at Tennessee Technological University.

Burton Pollin's researches in nineteenth-century literature continue, as he is preparing an edition of Benjamin Constant's translation of Godwin's Political Justice.

George Monteiro of Brown University is at work on a book-length study of Henry James and Henry Adams, and he is editing John Hay's short fiction.

Floyd Stovall was Edgar Allan Poe Professor of English at the University of Virginia until his retirement in 1967. Among his other important work, he edited Whitman's Prose Works 1892 for the Collected Writings of Walt Whitman.

Gordon Lindstrand at the University of South Carolina is surveying the textual problems in the works of Joseph Conrad and Dreiser. He is now preparing a critical edition of Nostromo.

Howell J. Heaney is Bibliographer in the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia.

Derek A. Clarke is Librarian of the British Library of Political and Economic Science at the London School of Economics.