Gregory A. Borchard, associate professor, is the graduate coordinator for the
Hank Greenspun School of Journalism and Media Studies at UNLV. His
research focuses on nineteenth century newspapers, the Civil War, and
antebellum partisanship. He teaches reporting and writing for mass media,
journalism history, qualitative methods, and communications historiography.
Joseph F. Ceccio is a professor of English at the University of Akron in Ohio,
with a PhD from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He teaches
courses in gothic literature, eros and love in literature, Shakespeare, and legal
writing. His publications include articles on Anne Rice and on various business
and professional writing topics.
Daniel F. Ferreras teaches French, Spanish, and comparative literatures at
West Virginia University. His work on the Fantastic, the detective story,
marginalized genres, and popular culture issues has appeared in French
Literature Series, Hispania, Politico, Lectura y signo, and Excavatio. He is the
author of Lo fantastico en la literatura y el cine (Madrid, 1995) and Cuentos de
la mano izquierda (Madrid, 1999.)
Anthony J. Ferri is a professor in the Hank Greenspun School of Journalism
and Media Studies at UNLV. His research interests include film and
entertainment. His book Willing Suspension o f Disbelief: Poetic Faith in Film
was published by Lexington Books in 2007.
Janies H. Forse is a professor of history and theatre at Bowling Green State
University. He teaches introductory level world civilizations courses and upper
level medieval and early modem history, including a course on Shakespeare’s
England, and graduate seminars on the history of theatre in medieval and early
modem Europe.
Erin L. Kelley holds a Doctorate of Jurisprudence from Texas Tech University
School of Law and an MA from the University of Texas at Dallas. She is an
adjunct professor at the University of Las Vegas Nevada and the College of
Southern Nevada in Las Vegas where she teaches English Composition. Her
interests include Shakespeare studies and romantic relationships. In addition,
Miss Kelley is a published poet.
Lawrence Mullen is a professor of media studies in the Hank Greenspun
School of Journalism and Media Studies at the University of Nevada, Las
Vegas. His research interests involve aspects of visual aesthetics and literacy
while examining the sense of community in virtual environments. He is a fan of
the New York Giants.