Popular Culture Review Vol. 12, No. 2, August 2001 | Page 140

136 Popular Culture Review Contributors Dr. Larry L. Burriss is a professor in the School of Journalism at Middle Tennes see State University. Anthony Enns’ essays on film and television have appeared in such journals as Postmodern Culture, Studies in Popular Culture, Quarterly Review o f Film and Video, and Journal o f Popular Film and Television. He is also co-editor of the anthology Screening Disability: Essays on Cinema and Disability (University Press of America, 2001). Lawrence K. Hong is Professor of Sociology at the California State University, Los Angeles. He is the author of a number of articles on Japanese society and popular culture. His current research interests deal with the interaction of Chinese and Japanese myths and legends. James laccino is Professor of Psychology at Benedictine University in Lisle, Illi nois. He has had two archetypal analysis books published by Praeger Press, most recently More Jungian Reflections within the Cinema: A Psychological Analysis o f Sci-Fi and Fantasy Archetypes (1998). He plans to develop a series of “Hero and Heroine” television texts for McFarland Press within the coming year. Mark Moss earned his doctorate from the University of Toronto and currently teaches humanities and history in the general arts and sciences program at SENECA College in Toronto. His book, Manliness and Militarism, has just been published by Oxford University Press Canada. Victoria Pitts is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Queens College, City University o f New York, where she is teaching courses on gender, social theory, the sociology o f the body and a special topics course on qualitative research on the internet. Her articles on the body have appeared in Sociological Quarterly and Body and Society, among other journals. Her book on the cultural politics of body modification will be published in 2002 by St. Martin’s/Palgrave Press. Carlos Ramet is a professor of English/Creative Writing at Saginaw Valley State University in Michigan. His critical articles and fiction have appeared in such journals as The Critic, Perigraph, Studies in Popular Culture and The Michigan Academician. He is the author of the book Ken Follett: The Transformation o f a Writer.