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) C o n t r i b u t o r s JeriseFogelisassociateprofessorofclassicsatMarshallUniversity.Shereceivedherdoc¬ torate in classics from Columbia University in 1994, with adissertation on the rhetoric ot ancestry in Cicero’s deliberative oratory. She has published articles on Malagasy and Roman oratory and Latin prose composition, and is revising for publication atranslation with theoreti¬ cal introduction and notes of Cicero’s dialogue. On Friendship (De amicitia). Naeem Inayatullah is associate professor of politics at Ithaca College. He is the co-author ofInternationalRelationsandtheProblemofDifference(Routledge,2004)andhaspublished in various international relations journals. He is researching how the Scottish Enlightenment s conceptualization of the economy was influenced by their knowledge ofAmerican Indians. He is also working on how resistance to imperialism often expresses itself through aesthetic forms. Pascal Michon is aformer Directeur de Programme at the College International de Philosophic (Paris). He received his doctorate from the 6cole de Hautes Etudes en Sciences Socialesin1995.Heistheauthorofmanyarticlesandthreebooks:tlementsd’nnehistoiredn sujep,Poetigned’uneanti-anthropolqpie.L’hermeneittiquedeGadamer,Les^estesdanslavoix. AvecHenriMeschonnic.Hisnextbook,Rythmes.EssaistirlesformesdnmonvementdeI’individuation , is to be published in 2004. MaxPenskyisassociateprofessorofphilosophyatBinghamtonUniversity,wherehe worksprimarilyintheareasofcontemporarycontinentalphilosophy,criticaltheory,andGer¬ manculturalstudies.HeistheauthorofMelancholyDialectics:WalterBenjaminandthePlayof A d o r n o a n d t h e P o s t - \ Mournings and tlie editor of TheActuality ofAdorno: Critical Essays on modem, as well as several volumes of Habermas’s political writings. Donald J. Puchala is Charles L. Jacobson Professor of PublicAffairs at the University of South Carolina and associate director of the Richard L. Walker Institute of International Stud¬ ies. He earned aPh.D. in the field of International Relations from Yale University in 1966 and taught at Yale, the State University of New York and Columbia University before moving to South Carolina. He teaches and writes on world politics, international relations theory, Euro¬ pean affiiirs, and the United Nations. Meili Steele is professor of English and comparative literature at the University of South Carolina. In addition to many articles on critical theory, philosophy, and literature, he has pub¬ lished three books. Realism and the Drama of Reference, Critical Confrontations: Literary The¬ ories in Dialogue, and Theorizing Textual Subjects: Agency and Oppression. His new book Hid¬ ing from History: Public Imagination and Political Dialogue addresses many i>f the topics ot the conference. Andrew Vails teaches political tlieory at Oregon State University. His main research inter¬ ests are in contemporary normative issues, particularly international ethics and questions related to race. He is author of anumber of papers on these topics, and is editor of Ethics in Interna¬ tional Affairs (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000) and Race and Racism in Modern Philosophy (Cornell UP, forthcoming). He is currently working on abook on racial justice in the United States. i ...

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