The Facts on File Companion to British Poetry Before 1600

(coco) #1

494 Appendix iii


encompasses Anglo-Saxon magic and medicine
and modern medievalism.
Thomas H. Ohlgren, Ph.D., professor of English
at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.
Publishes on medieval outlaw tales and Robin
Hood ballads.
Rebecca Olson, Ph.D. candidate, Brandeis University,
Waltham, Massachusetts. Examines the
representation of tapestries in Tudor poetry and
drama.
Leslie J. Ormandy, Ph.D., instructor of English at
Clackamas Community College, Oregon City,
Oregon. Specializes in early modern England and
the British Victorian era.
James N. Ortego II, Ph.D., assistant professor of
English at Troy University, Dothan, Alabama.
Interested in poetry and literature by and about
women, particularly women of color.
Daniel E. O’Sullivan, Ph.D., assistant professor
of French at the University of Mississippi.
Specializes in manuscripts and material culture,
including historical linguistics, as well as medieval
comparative literatures.
James M. Palmer, Ph.D., assistant professor of English
at Prairie View A&M University, Texas. Publishes on
Old and Middle English literature and composition.
Josie Panzuto, Ph.D. candidate in English, University
of Montreal, Quebec. Specializes in early modern
printing, bibliography, and romance.
Catherine Ann Perkins, Ph.D., assistant professor and
reference/instruction librarian at City University of
New York, Staten Island. Researches medieval and
early modern English drama and poetry.
Tony Perrello, Ph.D., assistant professor of English at
California State University, Stanislaus. Publishes
on Renaissance drama and medieval literature and
riddles.
Michael Peterson, Ph.D., instructor at Wright College,
Chicago, Illinois. Specializes in early modern
literature and film.
Alessandra Petrina, M.A., senior lecturer of English
literature at Università di Padova, Italy. Publishes
on late medieval and Renaissance literature.
Mardy Philippian, Jr., assistant professor of English
at Simpson University, Redding, California.


Researches metaphysical poetry and the history of
English devotional literature.
Daniel F. Pigg, Ph.D., professor of English,
University of Tennessee at Martin. Researches
sexuality and subjectivity in medieval literature,
as well as pedagogical practices of higher
education.
Ernst Pijning, Ph.D., associate professor of history at
Minot State University, North Dakota. Specializes
in Brazilian history, particularly 16th- and 17th-
century smuggling.
Frederick Porcheddu, Ph.D., associate professor of
English at Denison University, Granville, Ohio.
Specializes in Middle English, Old French, and
Old Norse texts, Arthurian and Charlemagne
legends, and sexuality studies.
Beth Quitslund, Ph.D., assistant professor of English
at Ohio University. Researches the English
Renaissance and reformation, especially Spenser,
Milton, and metrical psalmody.
Kimberly A. Racon, Ph.D. candidate and Teaching
Fellow at Lehigh University, Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania. Specializes in late medieval
economic exchange and labor practices.
Mary R. Rambaran-Olm, Ph.D. candidate and
teaching assistant, University of Glasgow, Scotland.
Interest in Old and Middle English poetry and
medieval military history.
A. Wade Razzi, Ph.D. candidate, Merton College,
Oxford University. Researches the works of Robert
Crowley.
Gavin Richardson, Ph.D., associate professor of
English at Union University, Jackson, Tennessee.
Publishes on medieval England and Anglo-Saxon
literary culture.
Daniel Ringrose, Ph.D., associate professor of
history at Minot State University, North Dakota.
Researches post-Reformation France.
David A. Roberts, Ph.D. candidate, Ohio State
University. Working on medieval English
chronicles and the development of English
national identity.
Sara Elin Roberts, Ph.D., lecturer at the University
of Wales, Swansea. Specializes in medieval Welsh
history, especially legal history, and the poetry of
Dafydd ap Gwilym.
Free download pdf