Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 1, Winter 2010 | Page 97

David Boyles is a PhD student at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. His research focuses on popular culture appropriations of Shakespeare and their depictions of race. Nogin Chung is an assistant professor of Art History at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania where she teaches modem and contemporary art. She has published articles on Norman Rockwell and public art and is currently working on a manuscript exploring liminality in the work of Kimsooja. Thomas F. Connolly is an associate professor of English at Suffolk University and Visiting Professor of Literature at the University of Ostrava in the Czech Republic. A former Fulbright Senior Scholar, his most recent book is Genus Genus Envy: Nationalities, Identities and the Performing Body o f Work. Ken Eckert is a PhD (ABD) in English Literature at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. A Canadian, he completed an MA on Beowulf at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Ken is a medievalist but has many interests, including modem and postmodern literature, ESL, and Christian theology. He is presently teaching at Keimyung University, Daegu, Korea. Milford A. Jeremiah is an associate professor in the Department of English and Language Arts at Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland. He earned his B.A. degree from Hampton University and his MA and PhD degrees in linguistics from Brown University. His research interests are language used in social contexts and cognitive processes involved in language production and comprehension. He has published articles in such academic journals as the CLA Journal, Ohio Journal o f English, Studies in Popular Culture, and Popular Culture Review. Tim Richardson is an assistant professor of English at the University of Texas at Arlington, where he teaches rhetoric, critical theory, film, and creative writing. His current research focuses on late antique rabbinic exegesis and psychoanalytic theory, but he really wants to be a DJ. MaryLynn Saul teaches medieval and 20th century literature at Worcester State College (in Massachusetts) and focuses her research on medieval women, particularly in Arthurian literature and films. J.A. White is an associate professor of English at Morgan State University in Maryland and the author of Hero-Ego in Search o f Self: A Jungian Reading o f Beowulf (2004). Recent pro