Popular Culture Review Vol. 13, No. 2, Summer 2002 | Page 165

Contributors 161 List of C ontributors Steve Bailey is Assistant Professor of Humanities and affiliated with the Program in Science and Society at York University in Toronto, Canada. He has published essays in The Velvet Light Trap, Popular Music and Society, and Communication Review. Janies David B allard teaches at California State University, Northridge. His re search revolves around terrorism and public policy. B arbara G. Brents is an Associate Professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is currently co-authoring a book on the brothel industry in Nevada. She also does research on social movements, political sociology and gender and has published in American Sociological Review, Sociological Perspectives, Criti cal Sociology, and The Journal o f Contemporary Ethnography. M artin Buinicki is a Ph.D. candidate in English and a Ballard Fellow at the Uni versity of Iowa. He is currently completing his dissertation, “Negotiating Copy right: Authorship and the Discourse of Literary Property Rights in NineteenthCentury America.” His article “Walt Whitman and the Question of Copyright” is forthcoming in American Literary History. M eta G. C arstarphen, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in Journalism at the Univer sity of Oklahoma. A former editor with a national jewelry magazine, she received “Best Feature” awards twice from the American Business Press. A former Paci fica radio producer, she currently writes for The Dallas Morning News, Our Texas magazine, and Black Issues in Higher Education. Am anda Dean is a graduate student in criminal justice at Grand Valley State University. She is currently conducting research on media and cultural representa tions of deviance. L au ra B. DeLind is Senior Academic Specialist in the Department of Anthropol ogy at Michigan State University. Fascinated by the contradictions endemic to our contemporary, post modem hves, she frequently deconstmcts and writes about “the familiar.” Of particular interest to her is the U.S. food system and more de mocratized, place-based approaches to food production and consumption.