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Notes on Contributors
  
  
  

Notes on Contributors

G. THOMAS TANSELLE, Vice President of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, teaches bibliography and editing in the Columbia University English department and is a co-editor of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of The Writings of Herman Melville.

Harold Love is Reader in English at Monash University, Melbourne, and has written widely on Restoration literature and Australian and English theatre history. He has edited The Works of Thomas Southerne with R. J. Jordan for the Clarendon Press.

David L. Vander Meulen, Assistant Professor of English at Brigham Young University, is preparing a descriptive bibliography of Pope's Dunciad.

James McLaverty is lecturer in English at the University of Keele. He is currently studying the background to the Dunciad and the relation of literary and aesthetic theory to bibliography.

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

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.

Naseeb Shaheen, Professor of English at Memphis State University, has published numerous articles on Shakespeare, Milton, and Old Testament archeology. He is currently at work on a three-volume study of Shakespeare's use of Scripture.

Gary Monitto is a doctoral student in English at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York where he is engaged on a dissertation on the use of logical and rhetorical modes in Hamlet.

Paul Mulholland, currently Assistant Professor in the Drama Department, University of Guelph, Ontario, is preparing The Roaring Girl for the Revels Plays, and, with G. B. Shand and Joel Kaplan, is editor of The Prose and Poetry of Thomas Middleton for The Clarendon Press.

Alvin I. Dust, Associate Professor of English, the University of Waterloo, Ontario, has published a number of items in journals based in Canada,


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the United States, England, and Portugal. He is a regular contributor to Abstracts of English Studies and the MHRA Annual Bibliography. His major efforts, however, have been spent on the life and works of Charles Cotton.

D. F. McKenzie, past-President of The Bibliographical Society (London), and Professor of English at Victoria University, New Zealand, is an authority on late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century printing through his scrupulous analysis of the documents concerning the early printing history of the Cambridge University Press.

James E. May, Assistant Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University's Dubois Campus, has published on Renaissance and eighteenth-century literature and is currently editing Edward Young's early poetry, 1713-1735.

John Feather, whose specialty is eighteenth-century publishing history, is lecturer in the Department of Library and Information Studies, Loughborough University, England.

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

Wayne Templeton is currently teaching at The University of British Columbia while completing a doctoral dissertation on the novels of D. H. Lawrence. He has published papers on Lawrence, Henry James, and Patrick White.

Paul Sorrentino is Assistant Professor of English at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, where he teaches American Literature. He is planning, in collaboration with Stanley Wertheim, a new edition of Stephen Crane's letters assisted by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Louis Daniel Brodsky's poetry has appeared in Harper's, Texas Quarterly, Ball State Forum, Southern Review, Kansas Quarterly, American Scholar, The Literary Review, and others. His twelfth book of poems, Mississippi Vistas (1983), and Faulkner: A Comprehensive Guide to the Brodsky Collection, Vol. I: The Bibliography, with Robert W. Hamblin (1982), have recently appeared from the University Press of Mississippi. Volume II: The Letters, of the multi-volume Comprehensive Guide, will appear in 1984.

R. M. Flores teaches Spanish at The University of British Columbia. He is preparing an old-spelling edition of Don Quixote.