Contributors

ADRIENNE FRIED BLOCK is a musicologist who has long specialized in music by American women. Her book Amy Beach, Passionate Victorian: The Life and Work of an American Composer has won several awards.

MICHAEL J. BUDDS is a musicologist on the faculty of the University of Missouri, Columbia. He is author of Jazz in the Sixties: The Expansion of Musical Resources and Techniques.

MARCIA CITRON, professor of musicology at Rice University, is author of the award-winning study Gender and the Musical Canon and two other books on women in music, Letters of Fanny Hensel to Felix Mendelssohn and Cécile Chaminade: A Bio-Bibliography. Her most recent book, Opera on Screen, deals with the aesthetics of opera when transferred to the medium of film or video.

J. MICHELE EDWARDS, conductor and musicologist, is professor of music and teaches in the Women's and Gender Studies Program at Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota. Recent projects include a recording of Marta Ptaszyńska's Holocaust Memorial Cantata, essays about Julia Perry and Frédérique Petrides, articles for the Revised New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, and presentations about Japanese women composers. She is currently preparing a book about Ruth Crawford Seeger's String Quartet (1931).

S. KAY HOKE chairs the Division of Fine Arts at Brevard College in the mountains of North Carolina. Currently she serves as a national workshop leader for the Music! World! Opera! program sponsored by Opera America and is writing a book on Douglas Moore's opera The Ballad of Baby Doe.

BARBARA GARVEY JACKSON is a professional violinist and professor emerita of music at the University of Arkansas. She is founder and publisher of ClarNan Editions, a firm specializing in music by women of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

The late L. JAFRAN JONES, an ethnomusicologist, was head of the music department at the University of Toledo, Ohio. She died of cancer on March 1, 1997.

LESLIE LASSETTER has published articles on Philip Glass and Meredith Monk. Her current research concerns the rise of English country dance in America, with a focus on the work of Pat Shaw. She has graduate degrees from the University of Cincinnati and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.

RENÉE COX LORRAINE teaches at the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga. Her articles on music aesthetics have been published in several journals.

ANN N. MICHELINI is professor of classics in the College of Arts and Sciences, University of Cincinnati.

KARIN PENDLE is professor of musicology at the College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati. Her publications include several studies on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century opera and on women in music.

NANCY B. REICH is working on nineteenth-century topics and has prepared a new edition of her book Clara Schumann: The Artist and the Woman, slated for publication in 2000.

CATHERINE ROMA is associate professor of music at Wilmington (Ohio) College and the founding director of MUSE, Cincinnati's Women's Choir, and Ujima, a male chorus at Lebanon (Ohio) State Prison. Her D.M.A. thesis for the University of Cincinnati concerned choral music by British women.

ROBERT WHITNEY TEMPLEMAN is assistant professor of ethnomusicology at the University of Cincinnati. His specializations include the Andean music of Latin America and the African diaspora. He has conducted extensive research among people of African ancestry in Bolivia and among Quechua and mestizo people of the highland Bolivian Andes.

LINDA WHITESITT, music education specialist, coordinates string programs for Miami–Dade County Public Schools. Her writings on women's support of music and the arts have appeared in several journals and in Ralph Locke and Cyrilla Barr's Cultivating Music in America (1997).

ROBERT ZIEROLF is professor of music theory at the University of Cincinnati and heads the Division of Music Theory, History, and Composition there.