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 01. 
Notes on Contributors
 02. 
 03. 
 04. 

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.

John Jowett is Assistant Editor of the Oxford Complete Works of Shakespeare.

Gary Taylor, Associate Professor of English, at the Catholic University of America, is joint General Editor of the Oxford Complete Works of Shakespeare.

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

Constance Wright is Associate Professor of English, University of Colorado at Boulder, and is editing The Legend of Good Women for the Variorum Chaucer. She has published in Classical Philology, PQ, ELN, and American N&Q.

Conor Fahy is Emeritus Professor of Italian, Birkbeck College, University of London. He has written extensively on textual bibliography and the editing of Italian texts, mainly sixteenth-century; a selection of these studies is in course of publication in Italy.

Dr Joost Daalder is Reader in English at Flinders University, South Australia. He has published editions of Sir Thomas Wyatt: Collected Poems (1975) and Jasper Heywood's translation of Seneca's Thyestes (1982). His articles on the text and interpretation of Wyatt's poems have appeared in many journals..

R. M. Miller is chairman of the Department of English at the University of Louisville, Kentucky. Currently he is at work on a textual study of Sir John Harington's epigrams.

Kevin J. Donovan is completing his doctoral dissertation on Jonson's 1616 Workes at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

William A. Ringler, Jr., Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Chicago, is Senior Research Associate at the Huntington Library. He has edited The Poems of Sir Philip Sidney, 1962, and has in press books on The Beginnings of the English Novel and A Bibliography and Index of English Verse Printed 1476-1558.


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O M Brack, Jr., is Professor of English at Arizona State University. He is preparing a three-volume edition of Samuel Johnson's shorter prose writings.

Jan Fergus is Associate Professor of English at Lehigh University, where she teaches eighteenth-century English literature. She has published Jane Austen and the Didactic Novel and a number of articles on provincial readership in eighteenth-century England. She is engaged, with Ruth Portner, in a book-length study of the Clay bestselling records.

Ruth Portner has lectured in English literature at Concordia University and is currently a partner in Westmount Phoenix Bookshop Montreal, specializing in old books.

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

Dennis M. Read is Assistant Professor of English and Director of the Learning Resources Center at Denison University, Granville, Ohio. He has published more than twenty articles and reviews on such figures as Blake, Cromek, Hart Crane, and William Carlos Williams.

Richard Knowles, Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is editing the New Variorum edition of King Lear.

Janet Butler (Haugaard), Associate Professor of English at the University of Puerto Rico, received her doctorate from Cornell. She has published articles on Conrad and Richardson and plans to continue working on Charlotte Brontë.

David Leon Higdon is Paul Whitfield Horn Professor at Texas Tech University and the author of Time and English Fiction (1977) and Shadows of the Past in Modern British Fiction. He is completing a textual study of Graham Greene.

Louis Daniel Brodsky's poetry has appeared in Harper's, Texas Quarterly, Ball State Forum, Southern Review, Kansas Quarterly, American Scholar, and The Literary Review. His twelfth book of poems, Mississippi Vistas (1983), and Faulkner: A Comprehensive Guide to the Brodsky Collection, five volumes to date, have appeared from the University of Mississippi Press, Volume V: The Manuscripts and Legal Documents in 1986.