29th Annual Meeting of the Society for Utopian Studies
October 7th-10th, 2004
Toronto
We are very pleased to welcome you again to the beautiful and
exciting City of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The program, including
the business meeting at lunch on Saturday, takes place at the Bloor
Marriott Hotel. You will notice that space has been left on Friday
and Saturday evenings if you care to sample the many fine restaurants
located in the area around the hotel. Excellent shopping is available
nearby in major department stores and in many boutiques to be found
in the Yorkville district. On Saturday night is the performance
of Poul Ruders’ opera based on The Handmaid’s Tale
by Margaret Atwood. The staff of the hotel is available to take
care of any accommodation needs you may have and if the conference
organizers can be of any assistance you have only to ask and we’ll
be happy to see what we can do. Everyone is reminded of the twenty
minute limit on paper presentations, in order to allow time for
questions and discussion. On behalf of the President, Ken Roemer,
and the Steering Committee, we wish you an enjoyable conference
and a pleasant stay in Toronto.
Peter Fitting, Local Arrangements Chair
Alex MacDonald, Program Co-ordinator
Utopian Studies, the SUS Journal
Toby Widdicombe, Editor of Utopian Studies, encourages conference
presenters to submit their papers for possible publication. Instructions
are printed on the inside front cover of the journal, copies of
which can be seen in the registration area. The journal address
is: Utopian Studies, Department of English, University of Alaska-Anchorage,
Anchorage AK, 99508, USA.
Awards Offered by the SUS
The Arthur O. Lewis Award is given to the writer of the best paper
presented at the annual meeting by an untenured or independent
scholar. If you are one of these, please submit your paper to the
Awards Committee. Guidelines for submission are as follows:
- Submitters are encouraged to revise and polish their papers,
aiming for a length of 15-25 pages.
- The paper should be complete with all required scholarly apparatus,
and formatted according to the submissions guidelines outlined
in the most recent issue of Utopian Studies.
- Send 5 copies of the papers by February 1, 2005, to :
Professor Rebecca Totaro
Department of English
College of Arts and Sciences
10501 FGCY Blvd. South
Florida Gulf Coast University
Fort Myers, FL 33965-6565
The Eugenio Battisti Award is presented annually for the best
article in Utopian Studies during the previous year. A Distinguished
Scholar Award recognizes lifetime achievement in the field of utopian
studies. The Larry E. Hough Distinguished Service Award recognizes
distinguished service to the Society and the field.
Society Archives
The Society maintains an archive in the Utopian Collection at
Pennsylvania State University, and encourages everyone presenting
a paper at the conference to deposit a copy. The address is: Society
for Utopian Studies Archives, Rare Book Room, Pattee Library, Pennsylvania
State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
THURSDAY
OCTOBER 7, 2004
3:00 – 6:00 High Park Foyer
Registration
12:15 – 1:15 Summerhill
SUS Editorial Board
1:30 – 3:15 Summerhill
SUS Steering Committee
Session 1. 3:30 – 5:00
A. Utopian Themes High Park 3
Doretta Cornell, Pace University – “Fictional Utopias,
The Emerging Cosmos, and God”
William Burton, Yale University – “The Allure Of
Dystopia in Murakami Ryu’s Five Minutes From Nowhere”
Alex MacDonald, Campion College University of Regina – “Public
Space In Utopia and Dystopia”
Chair – Lise Leibacher, University of Arizona
B. Utopian Issues High Park 2
Toby Widdicombe, University of Alaska – “Utopia
and the Problem of Overdetermination”
Christine Honkavaara, Loyola University – “Kierkegaard’s
Knight of Faith: A Metaphor of the Postmodern Ethicist”
Gilbert Fulmer, Texas State University – “Freedom
of Religion in a Utopian Society”
Chair – Gilbert Fulmer
C. Utopia, Latin America and Ecology High Park 1
Analisa Degrave, University of Wisconsin Eau Claire – “Ecology
and the Construction of Space in Latin American Literature: Four
Contemporary Authors”
Ian DeWeese-Boyd and Margaret DeWeese-Boyd, Gordon College–“Appropriating
Borges: The Weary Man, Utopia and Globalism”
Dean Birch, Political Science, John Carroll University – “Environmentalism
as Utopian Blueprint for the 21st Century”
Chair – Ian and Margaret DeWeese-Boyd
Session 2. Plenary Meeting. 7:00 – 8:30 pm High Park
Joseph Heath – The Efficient Society. Why Canada Is As
Close To Utopia As It Gets.
Joseph Heath is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto.
Respondent – Imre Szeman, Director of the Institute on
Globalization and the Human Condition and Associate Professor
of English and Sociology at McMaster University in Hamilton,
Ontario.
Respondent – Ed Andrew, Professor of Political Science,
University of Toronto
Wine and Cheese Reception. 9:00 High Park
FRIDAY
OCTOBER 8, 2004
7:30 – 8:30 Continental Breakfast
Session 3. 8:30 – 9:45 am
A. Utopian Themes in Film High Park 3
David L. Pike, American University – “The Heart
of the World and the Winnepegan Utopias of Guy Maddin”
June Deery, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute – “The
Pseudo-Eutopia in Literature and Film”
Dina Smith, Drake University – “A Mutable Utopia:
Prefabrication in Modern Design”
Chair – June Deery
B. Ancient and Very Modern Utopias High Park 2
Sing-chen Lydia Chiang, Tufts University – “Lost
Utopias in the Ninth-Century Chinese Collection Records of Mysterious
Anomalies”
Nicholas Power, University of West Florida– “Homedepotopia:
The Freudian Left and the End of Reification”
Tom Moylan, University of Limerick – “Irish Voyages
and Visions: Prefiguring, Reconfiguring Utopia”
Chair – Tom Moylan
C. Political Utopianism I High Park 1
Werner Christie Mathisen, University of Oslo – “The
Utopias of Two Norwegian Political Parties”
Susan McManus, Queen’s University Belfast – “Fictive
Theories, Concrete Utopias, and the Politics of Resistance”
Valérie Narayana, Mount Allison University – “Francine
Lachance’s La Québecie: Utopia or Post-Modern Nightmare”
Chair – Valérie Narayana
Coffee 9:45-10:00
Session 4. 10:00 – 11:45 am
A. Utopian Structure and Place High Park 3
Annette Giesecke, University of Delaware – “The
Evolution of Paradise: Urbanism, Primitivism and the Garden in
Ancient Greece and Rome”
Lynda Schneekloth and Robert Shibley, SUNY/Buffalo – “International
Peace Parks: A Utopian Vision”
Chair – Lynda Schneekloth
B. The Politics of Dystopia in Contemporary Science Fiction High
Park 2
Kenneth Saltman, DePaul University – “Collapsed
Subjectivity and Political Agency: Utopian Promises in the Dystopias
of P.K. Dick and Cronenberg”
Imre Szeman, McMaster University – “Reproduction
Without end: Ecological Breakdown in Peter Watts’ Rifter
Trilogy”
Maria Whiteman, University of Western Ontario – “After
Nature: Evolution in Greg Bear’s Darwin’s Radio and
Children”
Chair – Imre Szeman
C. Renaissance Utopias High Park 1
Cristina Perissinotto, University of Ottawa – “Imaginary
Cities, Imaginary Women: Renaissance Utopias and the Women Who
Inhabited Them”
Vikki Forsyth, University of St. Andrews – “Redefining
Arcadia: Pastoral Criticism and the Representation of Arcadia
in the English Renaissance”
C.Lynne Fulmer, Texas State University San Marcos – “New
Atlantis, Old Idols and False Gods: Francis Bacon on Miracles”
Chair – C. Lynne Fulmer
Lunch on your own 11:45- 1:00. Meet in hotel lobby for partners.
Session 5. 1:00 – 2:15
A. Cultural Utopias High Park 3
Luigi Manca, Benedictine University – “The Role
of Gender in Magazine Advertising’s Portrayal of the Twenty-Something
Utopia”
Andrew Paravantes, York University – “Drugs, Sex,
Communes: Exploring ‘Other’ Forms of Subjectivity
and Sociality”
Karen Collins, University of Windsor – “A Tale
of Two Cities: The Sonic Aesthetic of the Utopian and Dystopian
Future”
Chair – Andrew Paravantes
B. Elements of The Utopian Tradition High Park 2
Kine Nilsen, University of Oslo – “Utopia Versus
Dystopia: The Collapsing of Genres”
Angela Preuss, Florida Gulf Coast University – “Greater
Utopia: Libertarian Ideology in Daniel Defoe’s Journal
of the Plague Year”
Chair – Toby Widdicombe
C. Utopian Writing High Park 1
Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor, University of Memphis – “Speculations
on Irony and/in Dystopian Texts”
Ruth Levitas, University of Bristol – “Utopia As
Method; from Wells to Brecht”
Merritt Abrash, Lenox, Massachusetts – “Mindful
of Utopia: Writing The Utopian Novel”
Chair – Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor
2:15 – 2:30 coffee/refreshments
Session 6. 2:30 – 3:45
A. Cultural Expression of Utopia High Park 3
Peter Marks, University of Sydney – “The Utopian
Visions of Terry Gilliam”
Csaba Toth, Carlow College – “Girls Dreaming Utopia:
Music, Gender, and Club Culture in Tokyo”
Ana Acosta, Brooklyn College CUNY – “The Ideal
Body of 18th Century Anatomical Waxworking”
Chair – Ana Acosta
B. Reflections on Robin Kelley’s Freedom Dreams High Park
2
Hoda Zaki, Hood College – “Africa As Utopia in
the Black Radical Imagination”
Fran Shor, Wayne State University – “Utopian Aspirations
and 20th Century Black Freedom Struggles”
Gloria House, University of Michigan – “Surrealism
or African Spirituality”
Chair – Fran Shor
C. Utopian Theories I High Park 1
Hélène Greven-Borde, Université Stendhal – “What
I Need Is Perspective”: Looking Back On 50 Years Of British
Utopian And Dystopian Fiction (1920-1970)
Archie S. Graham, Ontario College of Art and Design – “In
The Name of Science”
Rebecca Kingston, University of Toronto – “Reconsidering
Cosmopolitanism”
Chair – Doretta Cornell
Session 7. 4:00 – 5:15
A. Modern Utopias High Park 3
Claire P. Curtis, College of Charleston – “Utopian
Realism: Octavia Butler and Theorizing Self-Interest”
Richard D. Erlich, Miami University– “Ursula K.
Le Guin: Eutopia, Antiutopia, Dystopia”
Briona Nic Dhiarmada, University of Limerick – “Nostalgia,
Utopia and Dystopia in Modern Irish Language Poetry”
Chair – Dwight Kiel
B. Utopia and Community High Park 2
Eric Burin and Mark Jendrysik, University of North Dakota – “Two
Utopias against Dystopia: Liberia, America and Racial Apocalypse”
Robert S. Fogarty, Antioch University – “Frances
Fitzgerald’s Cities On A Hill: A Blue Guide To Community”
Chair – Mark Jendrysik
C. Atwood and Piercy High Park 1
Peter Fitting, University of Toronto – “The Great
Rearrangement: Oryx and Crake as Anti-Utopia”
Fiona Foster, Concordia University – “The Utopian
Impulse in Oryx and Crake”
Virginia Griffiths, University of Oslo – “The Atomic
Bomb Question Lands Close To Home: Deliberative Democracy in
Marge Piercy’s Woman On The Edge Of Time”
Chair – Peter Fitting
5:15 – 7:00 Dinner on your own. Meet in hotel lobby for
partners.
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 9th, 2004
7:30 – 8:30 Continental breakfast Yorkville
8:00 – 2:30 Registration
Session 8. 8:30 – 9:45
A. The Politics of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed
I High Park 3
Avery Plaw, Concordia University – “Coming Home:
Political Pluralism, Communication, and Community in Ursula Le
Guin’s The Dispossessed”
Laurence Davis, Dublin, Ireland – “The Dynamic
Utopia of Ursula K. Le Guin”
Chris Ferns, Mount Saint Vincent University – “Future
Conditional, or Future Perfect? The Dispossessed and Permanent
Revolution”
Chair – Laurence Davis
B. Nineteenth Century Utopianism High Park 2
Antonis Balasopoulos, University of Cyprus – “By
Land And Sea: Science Fiction and Imperial Geopolitics In Turn-Of-The-Century
America”
Eduardo Febles, Simmons College Boston – “The Anarchic
Commune As World’s Fair: The Myth Of Transparency and the
Bankruptcy of Naturalism in Zola’s Travail”
James J. Gallant, Elms College – “Unrealized Sexual
Possibilities and the Failure of Utopia in Guare’s Lydie
Breeze and Hawthorne’s Blithedale Romance”
Chair – Robert Fogarty
C. Utopian Theory and Pedagogy High Park 1
Khristina Haddad, Moravian College – “From Composition
To Political Theory: Utopian Writing as a Method For Teaching
Political Theory”
Carrie Hintz, Queen’s College CUNY – “Utopian
Pedagogy: Evaluating Marooned”
Ken Roemer, University of Texas Arlington – “If
I Could Clone Myself: Reader-response Futures for Utopian Literature”
Chair – Ken Roemer
9:45 – 10:00 Coffee/refreshments
Session 9. 10:00 – 11:45
A. Fahrenheit 9/11 High Park 3
Christina Braid, Independent Scholar, Toronto – “Manufacturing
a Political Dystopia: The ‘Spectacular’ Achievements
of Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11"
Paul Majkut, San Diego – “Michael Moore: Fahrenheit
or Centigrade?”
Barry Vacker, Temple University – “Fahrenheit 9/11:
The Temperature At Which Theory Burns”
Chair – Barry Vacker
B. The Politics of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed
II High Park 2
Claire Curtis, College of Charleston – Ambiguous Choices:
Skepticism as a Grounding for Utopia”
Ellen Rigsby, Saint Mary’s College – “Time
and the Measure of the Political Animal”
Peter Stillman, Vassar College – “The Dispossessed
as Ecological Political Theory”
Chair – Laurence Davis
C. Political Utopianism II High Park 1
Mike Dubose, Bowling Green State University – “A
Good Guy Standing Up To Evil”: Reagan, Economic Utopianism,
and the Rise of Perceived Morality As Political Capital”
Jason le Grange, University of Cape Town – “The
South African Truth Commission: Rewriting the Past Through Utopian
Agency”
Justin Wyble, University of California San Diego – “Utopian
Scraps and Cognitive Maps in Don Delillo’s Cosmopolis and
Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange”
Chair – Alex MacDonald
12:00 – 1:30 Luncheon and Business Meeting Yorkville
Session 10 2:15 – 3:30
A. Three Utopian Explorations High Park 3
Donna Spalding Andreolle, Université Stendhal – “’Unchartered
territory’: Testing the limits of feminist ideology in
American women’s utopian and science fiction”
Tammy Smithers, University of Washington – “Seeking
Utopia: Renaissance Images of Perfect Urban Space
Laura Thompson, Lycoming College – “Comics and
Comeuppance: Utopia and Dystopia Among Superheroes”
Chair – Dina Smith
B. Utopia -Early, Modern, and Contemporary High Park 2
Ariel Fuenzalidia, University of Western Ontario – “Synthetic
Utopias”
Yutaka Ito, Yamagata University – “Realizing The
Utopia, Utopianizing The Real: Ernest F. Fenollosa and East Asiatic
Art as a Cultural Reforming Force”
Susan Lamb, University of Toronto – “Early Modern
Travel and the Utopian Impulse: Utility and Credibility in the ‘Formosan’ George
Psalmanazar, ‘Abyssinian’ Bruce and Baron Munchausen’s”
Chair – Carrie Hintz
C. Orwell, Stapledon and MacLeod High Park 1
Rob Breton, University of British Columbia – “George
Orwell and the Economic-As Is”
Vincent Geoghegan, Queen’s University Belfast – “Olaf
Stapledon and the Concept of Utopia”
Phillip Wegner, University of Florida – “Ken MacLeod’s
Permanent Revolution: Utopian Possible Worlds, History, and the
Augenblick in the ‘Fall Revolution’ Series”
Chair – Rob Breton
D. “Building Real World Pocket Utopias: A Discussion on
the Importance of Utopian Fiction to Radical Communities” Rosedale
With Toronto-based SF writers Nalo Hopkinson and Jim Munroe.
Chair – Peter Fitting
3:30 – 3:45 Coffee/refreshments
Session 11. 3:45 – 5:15
A. “The Matrix,” Digital Dystopias and Postmodern
Progenies High Park 3
Christina Braid, Independent Scholar, Toronto – "Styling
Dystopia the Japanese Way: The Animatrix, Searching for Substance"
Barry Vacker, Temple University – “Bullet-Time,
Two Big Bangs, and Two Bad Sequels”
Ellen Rigsby, St. Mary’s College – “Overcoming
Versus Redemption: Humanity As Utopian Remains in ‘The
Matrix’ and ‘Ghost In The Shell’”
Chair – Christina Braid
B. Three Utopian Texts High Park 2
William Hardesty, Miami University Ohio – “The
Thin Line Between Utopia And Dystopia: Kim Stanley Robinson’s
The Years Of Rice And Salt”
Naomi Jacobs, University of Maine – “Utopia and
Literary Postmodernism: Bernadette Mayer’s Utopia”
William Katerberg, Calvin College – “Legacies of
Hope: Tradition and Utopia in Almanac of the Dead”
Chair – Naomi Jacobs
C. Utopia as History and Literature High Park 1
Lyman Tower Sargent, University of Missouri St. Louis – “A
Centenary Celebration of the (Mostly) Obscure and Forgotten:
Utopias Published in English in 1904”
Darby Lewes, Lycoming College – “Pursuing Nature
To Her Secret Hiding Places: The Secret Core of Frankenstein”
Gorman Beauchamp, University of Michigan – “Captain
Gulliver in the House of Salomon: Some Reflections on Science,
Progress and Utopia”
Chair – Lyman Tower Sargent
Dinner on your own; meet in hotel lobby for partners
Opera: The Handmaid’s Tale
SUNDAY
OCTOBER 10, 2004
8:00 – 9:00 Continental Breakfast Yorkville
Session 12. 9:00 – 11:00
A. Utopian Theories II High Park 3
Barry Vacker, Temple University – “Death Valley
and Las Vegas: Jean Baudrillard’s Theory of the Desert
and Dystopia”
Dwight C. Kiel, University of Central Florida – “The
Dream of Transparency From Bentham to Zamiatin”
Kenneth Payne, Kuwait University – “’The
Whole World Once more Eden’: Nuclear War and Human Regeneration
in H.G. Wells’ The World Set Free (1914)”
Chair – Alex MacDonald
B. Utopian Theories III High Park 2
Trude Diesen Sundberg, University of Oslo – “New
Movements – New Utopias? About Utopian Thoughts In Attac”
Miguel Ramiro, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid – “The
Function of Law in the Utopian Intentional Communities”
Pavla Vesela, Duke University – “Welcome To Disasters:
Socialism and Travel”
Chair – Ken Roemer
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Abrash, Merritt – 5C merritt_abrash@earthlink.net
Acosta, Ana – 6A aacosta@brooklyn.cuny.edu
Andreolle, Donna Spalding – 10A donna.andreolle@u-grenoble3.fr
Andrew, Ed - 2 eandrew@chass.utoronto.ca
Balasopoulos, Antonis – 8B balaso@ucy.ac.cy
Beauchamp, Gorman – 11C gormanb@umich.edu
Birch, Dean – 1C dbirch@jcu.edu
Braid, Christina – 9A braidcd@sprint.ca
Breton, Rob – 10C robbreton@hotmail.com
Burin, Eric – 7B Eric_burin@und.nodak.edu
Burton, William – 1A william.burton@yale.edu
Chiang, Sing-chen Lydia – 3B SFranc1s@aol.com
Collins, Karen – 5A collinsk@sympatico.ca
Cornell, Doretta – 1A, 6C mcornell@pace.edu
Curtis, Claire – 7A, 9B curtisc@cofc.edu
Davis, Laurence – 8A, 9B ldavis@oceanfree.net
Deery, June – 3A deeryj@rpi.edu
Degrave, Analisa – 1C degravae@uwec.edu
DeWeese-Boyd, Ian – 1C iboyd@gordon.edu
DeWeese-Boyd, Margie – 1C iboyd@gordon.edu
Dhiarmada, Briona Nic – 7A brionanicd@eircom.net
Dubose, Mike – 9C themikedubose@yahoo.com
Erlich, Richard D. – 7A erlichRD@MUOhio.edu
Febles, Eduardo – 8B febles@simmons.edu
Ferns, Chris – 8A chris.ferns@msvu.ca
Fitting, Peter – 7C, 10D p.fitting@utoronto.ca
Fogarty, Robert – 7B, 8B rfogarty@antioch.edu
Forsyth, Vikki – 4C vlf@st-andrews.ac.uk
Foster, Fiona – 7C Fiona.foster@sympatico.ca
Fuenzalida, Ariel – 10B ariel_fuenza@yahoo.com
Fulmer, Gilbert – 1B gf03@txstate.edu
Fulmer, C. Lynne – 4C CLynneFulmer@txstate.edu
Gallant, James J – 8B JamesJGallant@aol.com
Geoghegan, Vincent – 10C v.geoghegan@qub.ac.uk
Giesecke, Annette – 4A alg@udel.edu
Graham, Archie S. – 6C archiesgraham@cs.com
Greven-Borde, Hélène – 6C helene.greven@free.fr
Griffiths, Virginia – 7C virging@ulrik.uio.no
Haddad, Khristina – 8C haddad@moravian.edu
Hardesty, William – 11B hardeswh@muohio.edu
Heath, Joseph – 2 joseph.heath@utoronto.ca
Hintz, Carrie – 8C, 10A carriehintz@hotmail.com
Honkavaara, Christine – 1B chonkavaara@sbcglobal.net
Hopkinson, Nalo – 10D NALO@web.ca http://www.sff.net/people/nalo/
House, Gloria – 6B gloriaaneb@aol.com
Ito, Yutaka – 10B Yuito_shigekura_kochi@yahoo.co.jp
Jacobs, Naomi – 7B Naomi_jacobs@umit.maine.edu
Jendrysik, Mark – 7B Mark_jendrysik@und.nodak.edu
Katerberg, William – 11B wkaterbe@calvin.edu
Kiel, Dwight – 7A,12A kield@mail.ucf.edu
Kingston, Rebecca – 6C rkingsto@chass.utoronto.ca
Lamb, Susan – 10B slamb@utsc.utoronto.ca
le Grange, Jason – 9C jasonlegrange@yahoo.co.uk
Leibacher, Lise – 1A lleibach@U.Arizona.EDU
Levitas, Ruth – 5C Ruth.levitas@bris.ac.uk
Lewes, Darby – 11C Druadh@aol.com
MacDonald, Alex – 1A, 9C alex.macdonald@uregina.ca
Majkut, Paul – 9A majkut@cox.net
Manca, Luigi- 5A LManca@ben.edu
Marks, Peter – 6A peter.marks@arts.usyd.edu.au
Mathisen, Werner Christie – 3C w.c.mathisen@stv.uio.no
McManus, Susan – 3C s.mcmanus@qub.ac.uk
Moylan, Tom – 3B Tom.moylan@ul.ie
Munroe, Jim – 10d http://www.nomediakings.org/
Narayana, Valérie – 3C vnarayana@mta.ca
Nilsen, Kine – 5B kine_nilsen@hotmail.com
Paravantes, Andrew – 5A andrew_paravantes@hotmail.com
Payne, Ken – 12A Kennethpayne@hotmail.com
Perissinotto, Cristina – 4C cristina_perissinotto@yahoo.com
Pike, David – 3A Dpike18@hotmail.com
Plaw, Avery – 8A aplaw@alcor.concordia.ca
Power, Nicholas – 3B npower@uwf.edu
Preuss, Angela – 5B ampreuss@eagle.fgcu.edu
Ramiro, Miguel- 12B maramiro@der-pu.uc3m.es
Rigsby, Ellen – 9B erigsby@stmarys-ca.edu
Roemer, Ken – 8B, 12B roemer@uta.edu
Saltman, Ken – 4B ksaltman@depaul.edu
Sargent, Lyman Tower – 11C lyman.sargent@UMSL.EDU
Schneekloth, Lynda – 4A lhs1@ap.buffalo.edu
Shibley, Robert – 4A rshibley@ap.buffalo.edu
Shor, Francis – 6B aa2439@wayne.edu
Smith, Dina 3A, 9C Dina.smith@drake.edu
Smithers, Tammy – 10A Tms9@u.washington.edu
Stillman, Peter – 9B stillman@vassar.edu
Sundberg, Trude Diesen – 12B trude_diesen@yahoo.co.uk
Szeman, Imre – 2, 4B szeman@mcmaster.ca
Thompson, Laura – 10A
Toth, Csaba – 6A ctoth+@pitt.edu
Vacker, Barry – 9A, 11A, 12A barryvacker@mac.com
Vesela, Pavla – 12B Pv3@duke.edu
Wagner-Lawlor, Jennifer – 5C jawagner@memphis.edu
Wegner, Phillip – 10C pwegner@english.ufl.edu
Whiteman, Maria – 4B mariawhiteman@cogeco.ca
Widdicombe, Toby – 1A, 5B afrtw@uaa.alaska.edu
Wyble, Justin – 9C jwyble@ucsd.edu
Zaki, Hoda – 6B hzaki@hood.edu
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