490 Appendix iii
of Wisconsin, Eau Claire McIntyre Library.
Researches comparative literature and religion.
Lisa L. Borden-King, Ph.D., assistant professor of
education at Minot State University, North Dakota.
Researches classical philosophy and semiotics.
Joyce Leslie Boro, Ph.D., assistant professor, medieval
and Renaissance English literature, Département
d’études anglaises, Université de Montréal.
Published on The Castell of Love and specializes in
romance, lyric poetry, and comparative literatures.
Matthieu Boyd, Ph.D. candidate in Celtic languages
and literatures, Harvard University. Specializes in
early Irish literature.
Bruce E. Brandt, Ph.D., professor of English at South
Dakota State University, Brookings. President of
the Marlowe Society; publishes on Marlowe and
Elizabethan metaphysics.
Andrew Bretz, M.A. student at the University of
Calgary, Alberta. Specializes in early modern drama
and poetry, especially Bridewell and prostitution.
Jennifer N. Brown, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at the University of Hartford, Connecticut.
Publishes in the area of medieval women’s
mysticism and vernacular hagiography.
Alexander M. Bruce, Ph.D., chair of the Department
of English and Foreign Languages at the University
of Montevallo, Alabama. Publishes on medieval
studies, folklore, and pedagogy.
Brantley Lloyd Bryant, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at Sonoma State University, California.
Investigates connections between trilingual poetry
and political discourse in England.
Diane Cady, Ph.D., assistant professor of English at
Mills College, Oakland, California. Specializes in
gender, sexuality, and economics in late medieval
and early modern culture.
Christina M. Carlson, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at Iona College, New Rochelle, New York.
Investigates the effects of early publishing.
Julie A. Chappell, Ph.D., associate professor of
English at Tarleton State University, Stephenville,
Texas. Specializes in textual studies, mysticism,
and early modern drama.
Cathryn A. Charnell-White, Ph.D., research fellow
at Center for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies,
Aberystwyth, Wales. Specializes in 18th-century
Welsh literature.
Susannah Mary Chewning, Ph.D., associate professor
of English at Union County College, Cranford,
New Jersey. Specializes in medieval English
anchoritism and feminist readings of medieval
texts.
K. P. Clarke, D.Phil. candidate at Oxford University.
Researches Chaucer and his Italian sources.
Christine Coch, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at College of the Holy Cross, Worcester,
Massachusetts. Specializes in Elizabeth I and
Edmund Spenser.
Helen Conrad-O’Briain, Ph.D., research associate at
the School of English and the Center for Medieval
and Renaissance Studies, Trinity College (Dublin).
Publishes on the epic and early medieval theology.
Christine F. Cooper, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at Utah State University. Specializes in
hagiography and late medieval English literature.
Raymond J. Cormier, Ph.D. Teaches literature at
Longwood University, Virginia. Specializes in Old
Irish and Celtic literature.
Michael G. Cornelius, Ph.D., professor of English
and department chair at Wilson College
(Pennsylvania). Specializes in Arthurian literture
and film, monarchial identity, and sexuality
studies.
John Micheal Crafton, Ph.D., professor of English at
University of West Georgia, Corrollton. Specializes
in medieval subjects, Christianity, and literature.
Susan Crisafulli, Ph.D., lecturer at Vanderbilt
University. Scholarly interest is the intersection of
the natural world and gender ideologies.
Thomas H. Crofts III, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at East Tennessee State University, Johnson
City. Researches Malory and romances.
Joel B. Davis. Ph.D., assistant professor of English at
Stetson University, DeLand, Florida. Specializes
in Tudor poetry and prose with an emphasis on
political poetics.
James Dean, Ph.D., professor of English at the
University of Delaware, Newark. Publishes on
Chaucer and medieval culture, especially biblical
adaptations and Chaucerian language.
Appendix iii 490