Popular Culture Review Vol. 13, No. 1, January 2002 | Page 151
Contributors
147
List of C ontributors
Linda M. Ambrose is associate professor and chair of the History Department at
Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. Her publications in rural
women’s history include two books and several articles that have appeared in the
journals Ontario History, Agricultureal History and Historical Studies in Education.
Sheri Chinen Biesen, Assistant Professor (PhD University of Texas at Austin,
MA u s e School of Cinema-Television) at Rowan University and author of Film
Noir and World War II: Hollywood’s Hard-Boiled Homefiont, has published in
Film & History, Literature/Film Quarterly, Popular Culture Review and Quarterly
Review o f Film & Video.
Robin Blyn is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of West Florida,
where she teaches courses in literature, theory, and creative writing. She is currently
in the process of completing Freak Fictions, a book-length study of the interface
between narrative and spectacle culture. Her work has appeared in such journals
as Arizona Quarterly and NARRATIVE.
Bert C ardullo is Professor of Theatre and Drama at the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, and the regular film critic for The Hudson Review. A critic and dramatuig
as well as an editor and translator, he has published sixteen books, the most recent
of which are Theater o f the Avant-Garde, 1890-1950: A Critical Anthology (Yale,
2001) and Practical Film Criticism: An Enlightened Approach to Moviegoing
(Edwin Mellen, 1999).
J. R obert C raig teaches broadcast and cable law, film history, film genre, and
non-fiction film courses at Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan.
Dr. Craig (Ph.D. University of Missouri-Columbia, 1981) is a professor in the
university’s department of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts, where he served as
department Chairperson from 1993-1996. He is presently the Graduate Program
Director for the department as well as the Film and Media division head of the
International Association on the Fantastic in the Arts. Dr. Craig has published studies
in Communications and the Law, Journal o f Popular Film and Television, Journal
o f Evolutionary Psychology, Feedback, Journal o f the Fantastic in the Arts, and
Literature/Film Quarterly, as well as prior articles in Popular Culture Review.
Denise DiPuccio is currently a professor of Spanish at the University of North
Carolina, Wilmington, where she teaches and researches in the area of Hispanic
theater. Her book. Communicating Myths o f the Golden Age Comedia, was published