Advisory Committee
The Editorial Institute's Advisory Committee, made up of faculty
members drawn from the schools and departments of Boston University,
ensures that the Institute's
multidisciplinary work has the support and approval of scholars in the relevant
fields.
Clifford
Backman (History) is a medieval historian. He is the author of
The Worlds of Medieval Europe and is currently at work on a critical edition
of the Opus tripartitum and the De predicando crucis of
Humbertus de Romanis, the thirteenth-century Minister-General of the Dominican Order.
Robert
Bone (Law) is an authority on intellectual property and the
economics of copyright.
Victor Coelho
(College of Fine Arts/Musicology) has written such works as Music and Science in the Age of Galileo, The Manuscript
Sources of 17th-Century Italian Lute Music and The Cambridge Companion to the Guitar. As the director and lutenist
of the group "Il Furioso," he has made recordings of music by Kapsberger, Castaldi, and Caccini.
Juliet
Floyd (Philosophy) focuses her work on the philosophy of mathematics
and logic, and on aesthetics; she is translating Frege's letters
to Wittgenstein.
Wolfgang
Haase (Classical Studies) has written on Plato and ancient Platonism
and on topics of Graeco-Roman and Early Modern political thought.
He is editor and co-editor of the multi-volume work Aufstieg und
Niedergang der Römischen Welt/Rise and Decline of the Roman
World (1972 ff., 90 vols. to date), of a volume on European Images
of the Classical Tradition and the Americas (1994), and of the International
Journal of the Classical Tradition (1994 ff.). He serves as Director
of the Institute for the Classical Tradition at Boston University
and has been founding co-president of the International Society
for the Classical Tradition based at that Institute.
Susan
Jackson (Modern Foreign Languages), Senior Associate Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences, works mainly in eighteenth-century
French literature, including Rousseau, and the epistolary novel.
Robert
Levine (English) is a medievalist who has written on and translated
French, German, Latin, and English literature.
Sean D. Noel is Associate Director of the Howard Gotlieb
Archival Research Center.
Anita
Patterson (English) is Associate Professor of English and Director
of the American and New England Studies Program at Boston University.
She is author of From Emerson to King: Democracy, Race, and the
Politics of Protest (New York: Oxford, 1997). She is currently completing
a second book, Passage to the Americas: Transnational Modernism in a New World
Context, which examines the influence of modern poetry in the U.S. on the
development of African-American and Anglophone Caribbean poetry.
Michael
Prince (English) is a scholar of eighteenth-century English
literature and philosophy, and the author of Philosophical Dialogue in
the British Enlightenment: Theology, Aesthetics, and the Novel, in Cambridge
Studies in Eighteenth-Century English Literature and Thought.
Bruce
Redford (The University Professors/ English) is a literary historian
and art historian; his scholarship has centered on eighteenth-century
British culture, and he is the editor of the five-volume edition
of The Letters of Samuel Johnson, and the second volume of
Boswell's Life of Johnson: An Edition of the Original Manuscript.
In 2002 he delivered the Lyell Lectures in Bibliography at Oxford University.
Jonathan P.
Ribner (Art History) researches the art of France and England in
relation to the history of politics, law, literature, religion, and science.
The author of Broken Tablets: The Cult of the Law in French Art from David to Delacroix ,
he is currently working on a book, Victorian Tides: Cross-Channel Studies in Art and Literature.
Dana
Robert (Theology) is Professor of World Christianity and
History of Mission; she has written on Christianity in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
James
Schmidt (The University Professors/ Political Science and History)
specializes in the history of political thought, and the editor of
What is Enlightenment? Eighteenth-Century Answers and Twentieth-Century Questions,
a collection of German discussions of the Enlightenment, with historical and philosophical
reflections.
Andrew Stauffer
(English) works primarily in Romanticism, nineteenth-century British literature, and textual criticism.
He has edited H. Rider Haggard's novel She for Broadview Press, and is the co-editor of the
Norton Critical Edition of Robert Browning's poetry. His current project is The Troubled Archive
of English Literature, 1798-1900.
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