Information
|
Submissions
|
Editorial Board
|
Contact
Notes on Contributors
Craig Anz
Simon Goulding
Richard Higgins
Daniel Lochman
Summer Pervez
Bryony Randall
Susie Thomas
Craig Anz received his Bachelor of Environmental Design in Architecture from Texas A&M University, his professional Masters of Architecture from the University of Texas at Arlington, and a Masters of Architectural Studies in history and theory at the University of Texas at Austin. He is currently an NCARB certified architect and faculty member at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale School of Architecture while finishing Ph.D. research at Texas A&M, emphasizing architectural education, urbanism, and critical design theory.
Simon Goulding is currently completing his PhD at the University of Birmingham. This work, a study of Patrick Hamilton and George Orwell, examines their use of space and place to assess their texts. His research interests include James Hanley, representations of popular culture, Socialist Realism within the UK and literary culture in the Second World War. He has recently presented a paper on Hamilton's Hangover Square which is currnetly under consideration for publication.
Richard Higgins is a PhD candidate in the Department of English at Indiana
University. His dissertation, entitled "Feeling Class," is on the emotional
life of clerks in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British fiction.
Daniel Lochman is a professor of English and Associate Dean of Liberal Arts
at Texas State University-San Marcos where he teaches courses on the Tudor
humanists, Elizabethan romance, Renaissance pastoral, Spenser, Shakespeare,
and Milton. Currently, his interests center on the cultural contexts of
English humanist literature and literary representations of early modern
friendship.
Summer Pervez is a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa, currently
completing a dissertation on the prevalence of horizontal thought (the
philosophy of Gilles Deleuze) in contemporary South Asian British
literature. She has published work on Salman Rushdie and Homi Bhabha,
Wole Soyinka, and Naugib Mahfouz, and has reviewed books on the British
South Asian diaspora and Asian critical theory.
Bryony Randall received her DPhil, entitled Dailiness in Modernist Literature, from the University of Sussex, and currently teaches in the Comparative Literature and English Department of the American University of Paris. She has published on Gertrude Stein and James Joyce, and is now working on two writing projects: a research monograph on working women writers in the literature of the long modernist period, and a co-authored textbook on fin-de-siecle Gothic literature.
Susie Thomas (PhD London) studied literature at Ulster University and Royal
Holloway College. She has lectured on British literature to American
students in London for twenty years and has run classes on creative writing
for the universities of Pittsburgh and Minnesota. She has published
scholarly articles on a wide range of British Literature and a monograph on
Willa Cather (Macmillan). Her most recent volume is A Readeršs Guide to
Hanif Kureishi (2005). She is currently completing a book entitled Burning
Books: Encounters in the Post-war London Novel.