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Contributors to this Issue
Dickens Quarterly, Volume 33, Number 1, March 2016, pp. 3-4 (Article)
Published by Johns Hopkins University Press
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/dqt.2016.0001
For additional information about this article
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/612314
Accessed 18 Jun 2017 15:40 GMT
DICKENS QUARTERLY
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Contributors to this Issue
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Maria K. Bachman is Chair and Professor of English at Middle Tennessee
State University. She is co-editor of Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia
(2013) and Reality’s Dark Light: The Sensational Wilkie Collins (2003).
She has edited several scholarly editions, including: Wilkie Collins’s “The
Dead Hand” and Dickens’s “The Bride’s Chamber” (2009); The Woman in
White (2006); and Blind Love (2004). She is also co-editor of the Victorians
Institute Journal.
Margaret Flanders Darby retired from Colgate University in Hamilton,
New York, in June, 2015, with a distinguished teaching award and a
completed book length ms. on the Victorian garden conservatory as a
metaphor of femininity. She has published both articles and book reviews
in Dickens Quarterly, as well as in Dickens Studies Annual, Victorian
Literature and Culture, Victorian Studies, and The Dickensian. This is her
first contribution to Dickens Quarterly since becoming its Review Editor.
Bradley Deane is Professor of English at the University of Minnesota,
Morris, where he teaches British literature of the long nineteenth century. He
is the author of The Making of the Victorian Novelist (2003) and Masculinity
and the New Imperialism (2014). He is currently beginning work on the
David Copperfield volume for the Dickens Companions Series.
William F. Long is Emeritus Professor in Biochemistry at the University of
Aberdeen. He has published several articles for The Dickensian and Dickens
Quarterly and contributed to the Oxford Readers’ Companion to Dickens.
v
Vol. 33, No. 1, March 2016
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DICKENS QUARTERLY
The scene was Mr. Cruncher’s private lodging in Hanging-sword-alley,
Whitefriars: the time, half-past seven of the clock on a windy March
morning, Anno Domini seventeen hundred and eighty.
A Tale of Two Cities, Book the Second, “Five Years Later”
Vol. 33, No. 1, March 2016