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When a project originally planned as one book becomes two, the acknowledgments multiply as well. All those I thanked in Would Poetry Disappear? are also part of this book, whether they like it or not. But I’m pleased to acknowledge these people who have had an especially important impact.
In their very different ways, my three intellectual mentors at Duke—Frank Lentricchia, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, and the late Bernard Duffey—instilled in me the belief that I had something to say in the world of American literature scholarship.
I am grateful to these colleagues at the University of Illinois for their support over a sometimes bumpy, but now happily smooth, road: Robert Dale Parker, Gordon Hutner, Bob Markley (fore!), Ramona Curry, Stephanie Foote, Martin Camargo, Sandy Camargo, Curtis Perry, Catherine Gray, Anustup Basu, J. B. Capino, Dianne Harris, Christine Catanzarite, Rick Powers, Carol Symes, Jim Hansen, Philip Graham—and most grateful thanks to two superlative colleagues, Bruce Michelson and Dale Bauer. Gardner Rogers, Ted Underwood, and Eleanor Courtemanche belong in that list, to be sure, but I trust they also know how much they mean to me personally. I haven’t seen that quintessential academic jet-setter Cary Nelson very much since he ascended to the presidency of the AAUP, but he remains an abiding source of inspiration over on Lynn Street.
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