Notes on contributors
著者(英) English Literary Society of Doshisha University
journal or
publication title
Doshisha literature
number 37
page range 223‑225
year 1994‑03‑10
権利(英) English Literary Society of Doshisha University
URL http://doi.org/10.14988/pa.2017.0000014782
223 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
JEWEL SPEARS BROOKER is Professor of Literature at Eckerd College. She is the editor of The Placing of TS. Eliot(1991) and the MLA Approaches to Teaching Eliot's Poetry and Plays (1988).
She was Visiting Lecturer at Doshisha University in 1993.
HITOSHI SANO received B. A. (1979) in law from Doshisha University, M. A. (1982) in German Literature from Kanseigakuin University and M. A. (1991) in English Literature from Doshisha University. He also teaches English as a fulltime teacher at Neyagawa Night High School and as a parttime instructor at Baika Junior College. He is mainly interested in T. S. Eliot's early poems. His M. A. thesis in English Literature was entitled "On 'What Tiresias Sees' in The Waste Land".
YUKO OUCHI, part-time instructor of English at Heian Women's Junior College, received her BA in English from Doshisha University and MA in English from University of Missouri-Columbia. Her main interest is in English Renaissance literature.
MASUMICHI KANAYA received his MA (1993) in English from DoshishaUniversity. His MA thesis was entitled "Time's Cycle, Time's Arrow, and Time's Stasis in Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles." His main interest is in 19th-century English literature.
NAOMI SAHO, a doctoral candidate at Doshisha University, received her MA (1991) in English from Doshisha University. She has published four essays on William Faulkner's A Fable and
224
Requiem for a Nun.
CHIKAKO T ANIMOTO is a part-time instructor of English at Doshisha University and Ryukoku University. She received her MA in English in 1990 from Doshisha University and obtained her another MA in English in 1992 from Michigan State University.
She has published articles on N athaniel Hawthorne and on Willa Cather, Kate Chopin, and French feminist criticism. She is currently working on the short stories of Nathaniel Hawthorne.
KAZUMI KANA
tsu,
part-time instructor of English at Poole Gakuin Junior College, received her BA (1989) and MA (1991) in English from Doshisha University. Her main interest is in William W ordsworth and other Romantic poets, and she has written two articles on Words worth for Core, No. 21 (1992) and Shuryu, No. 54 (1993).LEO LOVEDAY is professor of English Linguistics at Doshisha University. He was educated in Britain and received his M.Phil. from Cambridge University (1979) and his Ph.D. in sociolinguistics from Essex University (1990). He has published two books: The Sociolinguistics of Learning and Using a Non-native Language (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1982) and Explorations zn Japanese Sociolinguistics (Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 1986).
CHIHARU UDA, part-time instructor of English at Doshisha University and Ryukoku University, received her BA (1986) and MA (1988) in English from Doshisha University and PhD (1992) in linguistics from the University of Victoria, Canada. Her main interest is in syntax and phonology. Her PhD dissertation, entitled Complex Predicates in Japanese: An Approach in Head-Driven Phrase
225 Structure Grammar, is to be published III 1994 from Garland Publishing Inc., New York.
SEICHI SUGAWA received his BA (1988) and MA (1993) in English from Doshisha University. He is now pursuing the study of syntactic differences between English and Japanese from the point of view of principles-and-parameters theory. His MA thesis was entitled "Directionality Parameters and Word Order Variation."
KENZO TAKIZA WA received his BA (1971) in English from Doshisha University and M.Ed. (1993) in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) from Temple University, Japan. He is at present working on a project on comparison of discourse between Japanese and American high school students with a grant from STEP (The Society for Testing English Proficiency, Inc.).