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Notes on Contributors
  
  
  
  
  

Notes on Contributors

G. Thomas Tanselle, is Vice President of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and Adjunct Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. His association with Fredson Bowers, who is the subject of his essay in the present volume, goes back thirty years to the time when his annual contributions to these Studies began.

Martin C. Battestin is William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of English at the University of Virginia. His recent books include (with Ruthe R. Battestin) Henry Fielding: A Life and New Essays by Henry Fielding: His Contributions to the Craftsman (1734-1739) and Other Early Journalism, with "A Stylometric Analysis" by Michael G. Farrington. With Clive T. Probyn he has also completed an edition of The Correspondence of Henry and Sarah Fielding.

Donald D. Eddy, Professor of English at Cornell University, concentrates his research primarily on the writings of Samuel Johnson, John Brown, and Robert Dodsley.

J. D. Fleeman, Fellow and Tutor of Pembroke College, Oxford, is completing his bibliography of the writings of Samuel Johnson.

Eric Rasmussen is joint editor with David Bevington of the Revels editions of Doctor Faustus (forthcoming from Manchester University Press) and of Marlowe's Major Plays (forthcoming in the World's Classics series from Oxford University Press).

MacD. P. Jackson, Professor of English at the University of Auckland, is finishing his Oxford edition of Pericles, and has begun preparing a text of The Revenger's Tragedy for a new Oxford Complete Works of Thomas Middleton, to which he is also contributing a survey of canon and chronology. He co-editing The Selected Plays of John Marston, published by Cambridge University Press in 1986, and reviewed editions and textual studies for Shakespeare Survey during the period 1985-1991.

Harold Love is reader in English at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. His Scribal Publication in Seventeenth-Century England will be appearing from Oxford University Press in 1993.

Robin Dix lectures in English at Durham University and is currently working on an edition of Mark Akenside's poems.

Trudi Laura Darby works for the School of Humanities at King's Col-


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lege London and has published a critical edition of William Rowley's A Woman Never Vext.

James E. May, Associate Professor of English at Penn State University's DuBois Campus, is writing a descriptive bibliography of Edward Young.

David Stoker is a lecturer in the Department of Information and Library Studies of the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and the editor of the Journal of Librarianship and Information Science. He has published a number of studies on aspects of the history of provincial publishing and the book trade in England, particularly during the eighteenth century.

B. N. Gerrard began collecting eighteenth-century books whilst reading for an honours degree in biochemistry at the University of Sheffield. Eventually his hobby took over all else, and he is now completing his Ph.D. in English at Monash University.

Emily Lorraine De Montluzin is Professor of History at Francis Marion College in Florence, South Carolina. She is the author of The Anti-Jacobins, 1798-1800: The Early Contributors to the "Anti-Jacobin Review" (London, 1988) as well as articles on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British press history.

Arthur Sherbo, Emeritus Professor of English at Michigan State University, is making a special study of eighteenth-century periodicals and is also preparing a book entitled Further Critical Opinions of Samuel Johnson.

Peter Miles is a lecturer in English at Saint David's University College, Lampeter, Wales. He is author of The Critics Debate: "Wuthering Heights" (1990) and co-author of Cinema, Literature and Society (1987). He has co-edited Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White (1982) and Anthony Trollope's Framley Parsonage (1984). His articles and reviews have appeared in such journals as The Library, Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography, New Welsh Review, Notes and Queries, Powys Review, Prose Studies, and Trivium.

Ralph M. Aderman, Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and editor of the letters of Washington Irving and James Kirke Paulding, recently completed a biography of Paulding.