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=== [mailto:abrano@georgian.edu <big>Anthony Brano</big>] ===
=== [mailto:abrano@georgian.edu <big>Anthony Brano</big>] ===
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="display:none">.</span>Contact Us}}<big>Anthony is an associate professor of English at Georgian Court University in Lakewood, NJ, where he teaches writing as well as literature courses ranging from the Middle Ages to the Romantics. Along with his teaching duties, Dr. Brano directs the GCU writing program and is the founding director of the campus writing center. His research investigates how seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century playwrights and publishers repurposed Shakespeare’s plays as political propaganda.</big>  
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="display:none"></span>Contact Us}}<big>Anthony is an associate professor of English at Georgian Court University in Lakewood, NJ, where he teaches writing as well as literature courses ranging from the Middle Ages to the Romantics. Along with his teaching duties, Dr. Brano directs the GCU writing program and is the founding director of the campus writing center. His research investigates how seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century playwrights and publishers repurposed Shakespeare’s plays as political propaganda.</big>  


=== [mailto:edunnum@campbell.edu <big>Eric Dunnum</big>] ===
=== [mailto:edunnum@campbell.edu <big>Eric Dunnum</big>] ===

Revision as of 20:33, 18 July 2025

Anthony Brano

Anthony is an associate professor of English at Georgian Court University in Lakewood, NJ, where he teaches writing as well as literature courses ranging from the Middle Ages to the Romantics. Along with his teaching duties, Dr. Brano directs the GCU writing program and is the founding director of the campus writing center. His research investigates how seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century playwrights and publishers repurposed Shakespeare’s plays as political propaganda.

Eric Dunnum

Eric is an associate professor of English at Campbell University in Buies, NC, where he teaches courses in Renaissance literature, Milton, Shakespeare, and British literary surveys. His research focuses on early modern drama, the history of performance, and critical theory. Dr. Dunnum earned his Ph.D. from Marquette University and joined Campbell’s English department in 2013.

Vincent Mennella

Vincent is a Ph.D. candidate and graduate instructor in English at Southern Methodist University. His dissertation, Making the Golden World: Allegories and Alchemies of Material Wealth in Early Modern Literature and Drama, explores classical and materialist frameworks in Renaissance writing. He previously studied philosophy as a graduate student at the University of Chicago, and he taught courses in philosophy, humanities, and English at a number of community colleges in the greater Houston area before beginning doctoral studies at SMU.