Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 2, Summer 2006 | Page 141

Kwakiutl L. Dreher, PhD is an assistant professor of English and ethnic studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her research interests include African American literature since 1970, including auto/biography, film, visual, and popular culture, as well as mass marketed popular literature (romance). She has published A Eulogy for Tyrell Musgrove: The Disremembered Child in Marc Forster’s Monster's Ball in Film Criticism. Robert W. Duff is a professor of sociology at the University of Portland. He has published work on the culture of retirement communities, taxi-dance halls, and transgender cabarets. His current research examines the social impact of globalization and includes an article with Lawrence K. Hong, The Costs of Going Global: The Cases of Shanghai and Bangkok, Proteus (2006). Daniel F. Ferreras teaches French, Spanish, and comparative literatures at West Virginia University. His work on the Fantastic, the detective story, marginalized genres, and popular culture issues has appeared in French Literature Series, Hispania, Politica Lecturay signo, and Excavatio. Lawrence K. Hong is a professor and chair of the Sociology Department at California State University, Los Angeles. He has co-authored with Robert W. Duff on a number of articles on Asia, and has recently published a series of photo-essays on popular culture for Eye-Ai, a magazine published in Tokyo. William Petty taught in the Department of English and the Extended Campus at Oregon State University. His research interests included modem/postmodem American literature, autobiography, and baseball. He received his PhD in modem/postmodem American literature from the University of Oregon in 1994. He lived in Eugene, Oregon and is survived by his partner of 22 years, Katie, and their two children, Hannah and James. Dennis Russell is an associate professor in the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, where he specializes in mass-mediated popular culture and film, literary and music analysis. Russell has published articles in Popular Culture Review, Studies in Popular Culture, The Mid-Atlantic Almanack, Southwestern Mass Communication Journal, and Communications and the Law. Arthur Saniotis received his PhD in anthropology at the University of Adelaide. His research interests are comparative religion, peace studies, ecology, and medical anthropology. He is presently teaching in the Department of English, College of Arts, Sciences, and Technology at Christian University of Thailand.