University of Virginia Library

Search this document 


  

collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
 8. 
 9. 
 10. 
 11. 
 12. 
 13. 
 14. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
 8. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
collapse section2. 
 01. 
 02. 
collapse section3. 
 03. 
 04. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  

collapse section 
  
Notes on Contributors
  
  
  
  

284

Page 284

Notes on Contributors

G. Thomas Tanselle, is Vice-President of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and is one of the editors of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of Melville.

Wayne H. Phelps was most recently editorial assistant for The University Self-Study, 1975-76, at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He has written articles on seventeenth-century English playwrights and stationers and is preparing an edition of the MS. of William Basse's Polyhymnia.

Fredson Bowers, is Linden Kent Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia. He is currently occupied as Textual Editor of the multi-volumed ACLS edition of The Works of William James published by Harvard University Press.

Robert Thomas Fallon, Associate Professor at La Salle College, Philadelphia, received his doctorate from Columbia. He is currently serving as Treasurer of the Milton Society of America and writing a book on Milton's poetical and military imagery.

James McLaverty, Lecturer in English at the University of Keele, Staffs, has published a short study of Pope's printer, John Wright, and is now working on the first printing and publication of Pope's letters.

Edgar F. Shannon, Jr., former President and Commonwealth Professor of English at the University of Virginia, is writing other articles on Tennyson and a second volume of his book Tennyson and the Reviewers.

Christopher Ricks, Professor of English at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Christ's College, is editor of The Poems of Tennyson (Longmans Annotated English Poets, 1969) and author of a critical biography, Tennyson (1972).

George R. Keiser, Associate Professor of English at Kansas State University, is the author of several articles on later Middle English literature.

R. H. Miller is professor of English and Chairman of the Division of Humanities at the University of Louisville. The University of Kentucky Press has recently published his descriptive bibliography of the Graham Greene Collection in the University of Louisville Library.

Alan E. Craven, Director of the Division of English, Classic, and Phi-


285

Page 285
losophy at the University of Texas at San Antonio, continues to investigate dramatic quartos printed by Valentine Simmes.

Randall McLeod teaches English at Erindale College, University of Toronto.

MacD. P. Jackson, Associate Professor of English at the University of Auckland, has published many articles on Elizabethan-Jacobean topics, and has for several years been New Zealand bibliographer for The Journal of Commonwealth Literature.

Kathleen M. Lesko is a reader at the Folger Shakespeare Library and is currently working for her doctorate in English Literature at The George Washington University. She is preparing a critical edition of John Wilson's plays for her dissertation.

Shirley Strum Kenny, Professor and Chairman of English at The University of Maryland, College Park, is the editor of The Plays of Richard Steele. She is now completing an edition of The Works of George Farquhar.

Richard B. Wolf, Assistant Professor of English at Mississippi State University, edited Shaftesbury's Letter concerning Enthusiasm and Sensus Communis; an Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour for his University of Chicago dissertation (1976). He is currently at work on various bibliographical and biographical problems connected with Shaftesbury.

Arthur Sherbo, professor of English at Michigan State University, is the author of several books on eighteenth-century literature. He is presently working on a study of mid-eighteenth and early-nineteenth-century commentators on Shakespeare and also a separate book on George Steevens.

Thomas C. Faulkner, Associate Professor of English at Washington State University, has published articles on Dryden, L'Estrange, Halifax, and Crabbe. He is currently editing the Letters and Journals of George Crabbe and also Aaron's Rod for the Cambridge Edition of D. H. Lawrence.

William Baker, Fellow of Darwin College, the University of Kent at Canterbury, is currently engaged in editing George Eliot's late holograph notebooks and reconstructing her and George Henry Lewes's library.

Paul D. Voelker is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin Center System, Marshfield / Wood County campus, and served during the 1977-78 season as resident O'Neill consultant to the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company on a grant from the National Foundation for the Humanities. He is currently completing a monograph on O'Neill's first plays.

Robert W. Hamblin is Professor of English at Southeast Missouri State University. His doctoral dissertation, completed at the University of Mississippi in 1976, is entitled "William Faulkner's Theory of Fiction." He is associate editor of The Cape Rock, a little magazine of poetry, and author of essays on Faulkner.