ASEBL Journal Volume 10, Number 1 | Page 64

ASEBL Journal – Volume 10 Issue 1, January 2014 CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE Tom Dolack is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Russian at Wheaton College in Norton, MA. He graduated with a Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University of Oregon in 2007. His research interests include translation, imitation, 20th-century European poetry, and Russian literature. He is currently writing a book on imitation in the work of Osip Mandelstam. Sarah Giragosian is a Ph.D. candidate in 20th c. North American Poetries and Poetics at the University at Albany-SUNY. Her research employs posthumanist studies and queer theory to examine modern lyric subjectivities that challenge the limits of humanist and identity-based rubrics of being. Ben Irvine is a writer, publisher, campaigner, and philosopher. An Honorary Associate of the Department of Philosophy at Durham University and an Affiliate of the Well-being Institute at the University of Cambridge, he is the editor of both the Journal of Modern Wisdom and Cycle Lifestyle magazine, and the author of Einstein and the Art of Mindful Cycling: Achieving Balance in the Modern World (2012). Eric Luttrell (a member of the ASEBL editorial board) teaches at the University of Oregon where he received his Ph.D. in English with emphases in literary theory and medieval literature. His research employs evolutionary psychology and cognitive studies of religion to examine the interaction between Christianity and polytheism in Old English, Old Norse, and Medieval Latin literature. Eric Platt (a member of the ASEBL editorial board) attended the University of WisconsinMadison where he studied the history of early modern Europe and the Atlantic World. He completed his doctoral dissertation, which focused on cultural, intellectual and political interactions between the English and Dutch during the early seventeenth century, in 2010. Dr. Platt is now an Assistant Professor of History at St. Francis College. His research interests include transnational cultural and intellectual exchanges in early modern Europe, the interaction between religion and politics during the period, and the early history of New York (aka New Netherland). He is current ly revising his dissertation for publication. Gregory F. Tague, editor of ASEBL Journal / blog and general editor of Bibliotekos (www.ebibliotekos.com), is Professor and Chair of English at St. Francis College (NY) and the author or editor of numerous books. His current work focuses on the adaptive function of the moral sense in narrative. ▬ ANNOUCEMENTS The ASEBL Journal, fully peer-reviewed and indexed in the MLA International Biblography and Ebsco Host, is published every year in January. On occasion there might be a special issue. If you are interested in the journal, please visit the blog (About tab) for complete information, mission and goals, aims and scope: www.asebl.blogspot.com You may contact the editor at [email protected], with ASEBL in the subject line, but do so only after you have reviewed the About tab, please. Sister site: www.ebibliotekos.com Second Moral Sense Colloquium, at St. Francis College, Brooklyn, 7 March 2014. 64