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Contributors
James J. Kopp is Director of the Aubrey R. Watzek Library at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon. He holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from George Washington University and has presented and published papers on various aspects of Edward Bellamy and the utopian experience in America. His personal collection on the works by and about Edward Bellamy is considered one of the largest in private hands, and he also collects other utopian literature published in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Renee M. Laegreid received her Ph.D. from the University of Nebraska in 2002. She currently teaches at Hastings College in Hastings, Nebraska, specializing in American western and cultural history. Her recent publications focus on the evolution of the rodeo queen phenomena, and she is currently preparing a manuscript on that subject for publication.
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Thomas C. McClintock, Professor Emeritus, was a member of the Department of History at Oregon State University for thirty years, during which time he also served as Chair of the department for thirteen years and as Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts for four years. In 1983–1984, he was an Honorary Research Fellow at the Institute of U.S. History at the University of London. He is the author of a number of articles, essays, and reviews.
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Sean McEnroe is an Upper School history teacher at the Oregon Episcopal School in Portland, Oregon. He received his M.A. in history from Portland State University in 2001. His article in this issue is based on his master's thesis.
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Nancy Nusz is Director of the Folklife program at the Oregon Historical Society. She holds an M.A. in Folk Studies from Western Kentucky University and previously worked for the Bureau of Florida Folklife Programs. Under her leadership, staff in the OHS Folklife Program have produced numerous exhibits, festivals and other performance events, instructional materials and in-classrooms programs for schools, a statewide survey of traditional arts and culture, a radio program, community-based documentation, and much more in collaboration with community, organizational, tribal, and educational partners throughout Oregon.
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Gabriella Ricciardi is Coordinator of Las Artes Tradicionales en la Comunidad, a multiyear project of the Oregon Historical Society's Folklife Program. She received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Oregon in 1992 and has worked as a professor of languages, cultures, and literature in institutions of higher education in the United States, France, Italy, and South America. She has published extensively in various scholarly journals in three languages and is currently on the faculty at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon. |
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