The Facts on File Companion to British Poetry Before 1600

(coco) #1
489

C D


cOntRiButORS LiSt


Maia Adamina, M.A., teaches English at San Antonio
College. Researches female writers and theater.
Karley K. Adney, Ph.D. candidate at Northern Illinois
University, DeKalb, and instructor of English,
Kishwaukee Community College, Malta, Illinois.
Researches adaptations of Shakespeare for
children.
Jennifer L. Ailles, Ph.D. candidate in English,
University of Rochester, New York. Specializes
in early modern literature, gender theory, and
cultural studies.
Brandon Alakas, Ph.D. candidate, Queen’s University
(Kingston, Ontario). Researches monastic readings
of John Lydgate and John Whethamstede.
Kerri Lynn Allen, graduate teaching assistant at
Georgia State University. Researches Thomas More,
Shakespeare, Aemelia Lanyer, and country-house
poetry.
Susan L. Anderson, Ph.D. candidate, University of
Leeds, Yorkshire. Researches Renaissance drama,
poetry, and music’s role in literature.
Clinton Atchley, Ph.D., associate professor of English
and director of Master of Liberal Arts Program at
Henderson State University, Arkadelphia, Arkansas.
Specializes in the history of the English language.
Alison Baker, Ph.D., assistant professor of English,
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.
Specializes in Chaucer and Arthurian literature.


J. D. Ballam, Ph.D., visiting fellow, Harris Manchester
College, Oxford. Researches Victorian fiction and
aesthetics in the English literary canon.
Candace Barrington, Ph.D., associate professor of
English at Central Connecticut State University,
New Britain. Publishes on Chaucer.
Deborah L. Bauer, M.A., postgraduate student at the
University of Central Florida, Orlando. Researches
political and gender issues in medieval British and
Irish history.
Joseph E. Becker, Ph.D., assistant professor of English
at the University of Maine, Fort Kent. Specializes
in comparative literature and Jungian theory.
Kimberly K. Bell, Ph.D,. assistant professor of English
at Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas.
Researches medieval manuscript production,
Middle English romance, and genre theory.
Lysbeth Em Benkert, Ph.D., associate professor of
English at Northern State University, Aberdeen,
South Dakota. Specializes in early modern women
writers, Shakespeare, and Alexander Pope.
Andrew Bethune, Ph.D., assistant professor of English
at Albion College, Michigan. Research interests in
romance and the poetry of the 13th-century Barons’
Wars.
Carol D. Blosser, Ph.D., teaches humanities at Regents
School of Austin, Texas. Researches the Stationers
Company and the English Reformation.
Janice M. Bogstad, Ph.D., professor and head
collection development librarian at the University

appendiX iii

Free download pdf