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As is true with many large-scale projects, the path to this book’s completion was met with challenges both expected and unexpected: multiple job transitions, first-time parenthood, global time zone coordination, and a rapidly changing world for U.S. daytime television.
We are grateful to the following persons for their ongoing support and enthusiasm for this project: Leila Salisbury, Director of the University Press of Mississippi, who understood our vision of this collection and its potential to intervene at a crucial moment in the history of a beloved television genre; the anonymous reviewers, whose comments on the project proposal proved extremely helpful as the project developed; and our contributors in the worlds of academia, the television industry, and soap fan communities, whose unique perspectives and areas of expertise have shed new insight into the past and future potential of soap opera.
In addition, we thank the other scholars, soap viewers, and industry executives we talked with during this project who provided us with invaluable ideas. We also thank Eric Zinner for his enthusiasm; Henry Jenkins for his support and for helping to create the germ of this idea through his “Gender and Fan Studies/Culture” series on his Confessions of an Aca/Fan blog (http://www.henryjenkins.org/); Amanda Ford and Benjamin De Kosnik for their patience and support; and Kimberly Chen, Christopher Goetz, Caitlin Marshall, and Jennifer Lowe, who were all outstanding research assistants. This project could not have succeeded without all these colleagues and friends.
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