Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2014 | Page 115

I ll American literature and class/caste studies. He is a 2014-15 Fulbright-Nehru scholar in Jharkhand India. Helmut G. Loeffler is an Assistant Professor in the History Department at the City University of New York’s Queensborough campus. He works on ancient Greek historiography, the history of Classical scholarship and the reception of Greek and Roman ideas in popular culture. His recent publications include books and articles on the Greek historiographer Herodotus and the German classicist Ulrich von WilamowitzMoellendorff Richard Logsdon is professor of English at the College of Southern Nevada. He is the former senior editor of Red Rock Review, a small literary magazine that enjoyed national distribution. He is also senior editor of and contributing author to In the Shadow o f the Strip, a collection of short stories published by University of Nevada Press. He has written and published several college text books and numerous short stories. John J. May is a PhD student at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. He holds a B.A. in History from Brooklyn College and an M.A. in English Literature from the University of Nevada Las Vegas. His research focus is twentieth-century American Literature with an emphasis on the works of H.P. Lovecraft. Robert Miklitsch is Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at Ohio University. His work on film and television has appeared in Film Quarterly, Journal o f Film and Video, Journal o f Popular Film and Television, New Review o f Film and Television Studies, and Screen. He is the editor of Psycho-Marxism (1998) and the author of From Hegel to Madonna (1998), Roll Over Adorno (2006), and Siren City: Sound and Source Music in Classic American Noir (2011). His edited collection. Kiss the Blood O ff My Hands: On Classic Noir, is forthcoming from the University of Illinois Press in 2014 and he’s currently completing a book on classic noir in the “atomic age.” David Sandner is Professor of English at California State University, Fullerton. His most recent work. Critical Discourses o f the Fantastic, 1712-1831 (Ashgate), is currently a Finalist for the 2014 Mythopoeic Award for scholarship on fantastic literature; his edited collection. The Treasury o f the Fantastic, co-edited with Jacob Weisman, has been