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Contributors


FRED BLOCK teaches sociology at the University of California-Davis. The article published here is drawn from his new book, The Vampire State and Other Myths and Fallacies about the US Economy (New Press, 1996).

ATILIO A. BORON is professor of political theory at the University of Buenos Aires.

STEPHEN BURT is a graduate student in English at Yale. His poems have appeared in PN Review.

DANIEL DENNETT is Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences at Tufts University and the director of the Center for Cognitive Studies. His most recent book is Kinds of Minds (Basic, 1996).

ALLISON STARK DRAPER is an editor at Grove/Atlantic.

ROBERT P. GEORGE is associate professor of politics at Princeton University and a presidential appointee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights. He is author of Making Men Moral: Civil Liberties and Public Morality and editor of The Autonomy of Law: Essays on Legal Positivism (both published by Oxford University Press).

MARC HAEFELE is a political columnist at the L.A. Weekly.

ROBERT HAHN has written four chapbooks of poems. His work has appeared over the years in Paris Review, Southwest Review, New Republic, Harper's, TriQuarterly, and elsewhere. He lives in Vermont, where he is president of Johnson State College.

MICHAEL HAWLEY lives in New York City. His short stories have appeared in The New Yorker and Sun Dog: The Southeast Review.

FRANCES KAMM is professor of philosophy and adjunct professor of law at New York University, and will be visiting professor of philosophy at UCLA. Her books include Creation and Abortion and Morality, Mortality, vols. I and II (all Oxford University Press).

REBECCA KAISER teaches writing at Tufts University, and has just completed her first manuscript, The Loomfixer, at the MacDowell Colony. She received a Masters in poetry at Boston University.

CLAUDIA KEELAN is the author of Refinery. A new book of poems, The Secularist, is forthcoming in the spring from University of Georgia Press. She teaches at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.

IVAN KRIELKAMP is a freelance writer and graduate student in the department of English at Brown University.

ELIZABETH MACKLIN is the author of A Woman Kneeling in the Big City: Poems (W.W. Norton).

FRANK MICHELMAN, Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard University, is at work on a book on the legal theory of constitutional democracy.

JESSICA NEUWIRTH is an international human rights lawyer and activist, and a member of the Board of Directors of the women's human rights group Equality Now.

MARTHA C. NUSSBAUM is professor of law and ethics at the University of Chicago and author of several books, including Love's Knowledge and Poetic Justice.

H. ALLEN ORR is assistant professor of biology at the University of Rochester and a David and Lucile Packard Fellow.

LIAM RECTOR's books of poems are The Sorrow of Architecture and American Prodigal. He directs graduate writing seminars at Bennington College.

ERIK RIESELBACH is a freelance editor, designer, and typesetter.

PETER SACKS' books of poems are In These Mountains and Promised Lands. He is also author of The English Elegy. He teaches at Harvard University.

MARK SANDERS is completing a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature at Columbia University. His essays have appeared in Research in African Literatures and Imprimatur.

CHARLES SIMIC was born in Yugoslavia in 1938. His most recent book is Walking the Black Cat. He lives in New Hampshire.

WILLARD SPIEGELMAN is the Hughes Professor of English at Southern Methodist University, and editor of the Southwest Review. His latest book is Majestic Indolence: English Romantic Poetry and the Work of Art (Oxford University Press).

ALAN A. STONE is Touroff-Glueck Professor of Law and Psychiatry at Harvard Law School.

YAEL TAMIR is senior lecturer in philosophy at Tel Aviv University. She is the author of Liberal Nationalism (Princeton University Press, 1993) and the editor of Democratic Education in a Multicultural Society (Blackwell, 1995).




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