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Rachel Potter Editor & Author

Rachel Potter is a Senior Lecturer in twentieth century literature at the University of East Anglia. Her publications include Modernism and Democracy: Literary Culture, 1900-1930 (Oxford, 2005), and essays on a range of modernist writers. She is currently working on a book called Obscene Modernism: Literary Censorship and Experiment, 1900-1940 and an Introductory Guide to Modernism for Edinburgh University Press. Suzanne Hobson is a Lecturer in twentieth-century literature at Queen Mary, University of London. She has published articles on modernism and religion in Literature and Theology (2008) and Literature Compass (2007) and is currently completing a book titled Modernism, Secularism and Literary Culture: The New Angel. Tim Armstrong is Professor of Modern Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London. His publications include Modernism, Technology and the Body: A Cultural Study (1998), Haunted Hardy: Poetry, History, Memory (2000) and Modernism: A Cultural History (2005). He is currently working on a study of the conceptual ramifications of slavery. David Ayers is Professor of Modernism and Critical Theory at the University of Kent. His publications include Wyndham Lewis and Western Man (1992), English Literature of the 1920s (1999), Modernism (2004) and Literary Theory: A Reintroduction (2008). He is currently working on a project concerning the cultural impact of the Russian Revolution in Britain. Geoff Gilbert is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the American University of Paris, where he also directs the MA in Cultural Translation. He writes on literary modernism in Before Modernism Was (2005), Scots writing, and sexuality, and is currently working on ‘contemporary realism’ and its agon with contemporary economics. Rowan Harris is an independent scholar with a research interest in modernism. Her work focuses on Mina Loy and Dorothy Richardson, and explores the relations between feminine sexuality, the new forms of commodity culture and avant-garde experimentation in the early decades of the twentieth century. Alan Marshall is a writer, teacher and scholar, presently based at King’s College London, where he was formerly Head of the Department of American Studies. He is the author of American Experimental Poetry and Democratic Thought (Oxford University Press, 2009) and of numerous articles on modern British and American poetry. Peter Nicholls is Professor of English at New York University. His publications include Ezra Pound: Politics, Economics and Writing (1984), Modernisms: A Literary Guide (1995, 2009), George Oppen and the Fate of Modernism (2007), and many articles and essays on literature and theory. He co-edited with Laura Marcus The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century English Literature (2004) and is US editor of the journal Textual Practice. Sandeep Parmar received a PhD in English Literature from UCL in 2008. The subject of her dissertation was the unpublished autobiographies of Mina Loy. She has co-edited and introduced a critical edition of Hope Mirrlees’ poetry at Newnham College, Cambridge, which is forthcoming from Carcanet Press (Fyfield) in 2011. She has taught literature and creative writing and is currently a Visiting Scholar at New York University where she is completing her forthcoming monograph on Loy entitled Myth of the Modern Woman (Editions Rodopi). She is also Reviews Editor for The Wolf magazine. Andrew Michael Roberts is Reader in English at the University of Dundee, with research interests in contemporary poetry, modernism, psychoanalytical theory and cognitive processes in literature. His books include: Conrad and Masculinity (2000); Poetry and Contemporary Culture (co-edited, 2001); Geoffrey Hill (2004). He is currently completing a book entitled Poetry & Ethics, and a book on Digital Poetry. John Wilkinson is an English poet living in Chicago and teaching at the University of Chicago following a career in mental health services in the UK. He has published six collections of poetry with Salt and a collection of critical essays, mainly on recent British poetry. His most recent book of poetry is Reckitt’s Blue from Seagull Books.