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Back MatterSource: The Irish Review (1986-), No. 32, Thinking in Public (Autumn - Winter, 2004)Published by: Cork University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/29736263 .
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Notes on Contributors
GUY BEINER teaches European history at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beer-Sheva, Israel. Formerly
a Government of Ireland Research Fellow, he
specializes in questions of memory and forgetting in modern Irish history
HARRY BROWNE is a journalist and lecturer in the School of Media at Dublin
Institute of Technology.
JOE CLEARY is a senior lecturer in English at NUI Maynooth, where he teaches
colonial and postcolonial literature and contemporary cultural theory. Books
include Literature, Partition, and the Nation-State: Culture and Conflict in Ireland, Israel
and Palestine (2002) and The Cambridge Companion to Modern Irish Culture, co-edited
with Dr Claire Connolly (forthcoming). He took his Ph.D. at Columbia University, New York, where the late Professor Edward Said was his doctoral supervisor.
HARRY CLIFTON is teaching this year in University College Dublin. God in
France: a Paris Sequence ?994-98 was published last year by Metre Editions.
CATRIONA CLUTTERBUCK is a lecturer in the Department of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama at University College Dublin.
ALICE CORREIA is a PhD candidate at the University of Sussex. Working within a postcolonial framework, her research examines the multiple national and cultural
identities evident in contemporary art from the UK.
PATRICK CROTTY is Professor of Irish and Scottish Literary History at the
Academy for Irish Cultural Heritages, University of Ulster, and Director of the
Yeats Winter School.
DAVID DWAN is a lecturer in the School of English at the Queen's University, Belfast.
CHRISTOPHER FARRINGTON is a researcher in the School of Politics and
International Studies, Queen's University Belfast.
LEONTIA FLYNN recently completed a doctorate at Queen's University Belfast.
Her first collection of poetry, These Days was published in 2004.
SIOBH?N GARRIGAN is author of Beyond Ritual: Sacramental Theology after Habermas (Ashgate, 2004) and Assistant Professor at Yale University's Divinity School and Institute of Sacred Music. Her PhD was from Milltown, Dublin, and her
home is in Westport, Co. Mayo.
138 Notes on Contributors, Irish Review 32 (2004)
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MOYRA HASLETTlectures in English at Queen's University Belfast and is author
o? Pope to Burney, 1714-1779: Scriblerians to Bluestockings (2003) and Byron's (Don
Juan' and the Donju?n Legend (1997).
MICHAEL HOPKINSON is a reader in history at the University of Stirling and
author of Green against Green: The Irish Civil War (1990) and The Irish War of
Independence (1999).
MICHAEL McATEER lectures in English at Queen s University Belfast. He is the
author of Standish CGrady,AE and Yeats: History, Politics, Culture (2002).
DEIRDRE McMAHON is a lecturer in History at Mary Immaculate College,
University of Limerick.
R??NA NI FHRIGHIL teaches Irish language and literature at St Patrick's
College, Drumcondra.
DIO G O'CONNELL is a lecturer in film and media at the Institute of Art, Design & Technology, D?n Laoghaire, and is completing a doctoral thesis on Irish cinema
at Dublin City University.
MARGARET ? h?GARTAIGH teaches history at St Patrick's College, Drumcondra. Her biography of Dr. Kathleen Lynn will be published in 2005.
KEVIN RAFTER writes and broadcasts on Irish politics. He is the author of
Martin Mansergh:A Biography (2002).
IAN CAMPBELL ROSS teaches English in Trinity College, Dublin. He is author
of Laurence Sterne: A Life (2001).
DIARMUID SCULLY lectures in Medieval History at NUI Cork.
Notes on Contributors, Irish Review 32 (2004) 139
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70790V85?12
533a c
P UNIVERSITY PRESS
www.corkuniversitypress.com
Cover image: 'The Crowd Transfixed' by Joy Gerrard.
Reproduced courtesy of the artist.
Design by Kunnert + Tierney, Cork
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