Search by
  •  
     
     

Our Authors

Browse Alphabetically:


Frances E. Dolan

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Jay T. Dolmage

Jay Dolmage is an assistant professor of English at the University of Waterloo. He is the author of Instructor's Manual for How to Write Anything and the coauthor of How to Write Anything: A Guide and Reference with Readings (with John J. Ruszkiewicz) and Disability and the Teaching of Writing (with Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson and Brenda Jo Brueggemann). He is the coeditor, with Nedra Reynolds, of the new Bedford Bibliography for Teachers of Writing.  He teaches graduate classes in rhetoric and composition pedagogy and has published widely on rhetorical theory and accessible teaching. To hear Jay talk about the readings in How to Write Anything, watch the Bedford/St. Martin’s “Author Talk” video.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE
MEET THE AUTHOR

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Michael Dorris

Michael Dorris' fiction includes A Yellow Raft in Blue Water, The Cloud Chamber, The Crown of Columbus, coauthored with Louise Erdrich, and the story collection Working Men. Among his nonfiction works are The Broken Cord, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, and a collection of essays, Paper Trail.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was a Russian novelist and writer of fiction whose works, including Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov, have had a profound and lasting effect on intellectual thought and world literature.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Susan J. Douglas

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Frederick Douglass

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Douglas Downs

Doug Downs is an assistant professor of rhetoric and composition in the Department of English at Montana State University.  His research interests center on research-writing pedagogy both in first-year composition and across the undergraduate curriculum.  He continues to work extensively with Elizabeth Wardle on writing-about-writing pedagogies and is currently studying problems of researcher authority in undergraduate research in the humanities.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) studied medicine at Edinburgh University, but ultimately gave up medicine to pursue a career in writing both fiction and non-fiction.  His iconic sleuths, Holmes and Watson, have entertained generations of readers.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Lisa Dresdner

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


W. E. B. Du Bois

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


James M. Dubinsky

James M. Dubinsky is an associate professor of Rhetoric and Writing and since 2008, the inaugural director of the Center for Student Engagement and Community Partnerships (CSECP) at Virginia Tech.  From 1998 until mid-2008, he directed the Professional Writing Program in the Department of English, a program he was hired to build. Dubinsky chairs the board of directors for the YMCA at Virginia Tech and recently served as president for the Association for Business Communication (ABC).  He has received college-level awards for both teaching and outreach, and the first university award for the scholarship of teaching and learning. Dubinsky’s research focuses on the scholarship of teaching, combining historical, rhetorical, and qualitative methods to study the connections of experiential learning and reflective practice.  His articles have been published in journals such as Technical Communication Quarterly (TCQ), Business Communication Quarterly (BCQ), and the Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Laurent Dubois

Laurent Dubois (PhD. University of Michigan) is associate professor of history at Michigan State University. His book A Colony of Citizens: Revolution and Slave Emancipation in the French Caribbean, 1787–1804 (2004) won the American Historical Association Prize in Atlantic History and the John Edwin Fagg Award. He is also the author of Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution (2004), which was a Christian Science Monitor Noteworthy Book of 2004 and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of 2004, and Les esclaves de la République: l'histoire oubliée de la première emancipation, 1787–1794 (1998).

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Ellen Carol DuBois

Ellen Carol DuBois is Professor of History at the University of California at Los Angeles. DuBois is the author of Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an Independent Women’s Movement in America, 1848-1969; Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Women’s Suffrage (winner of the 1998 Joan Kelly Price Award from the American Historical Association); and Woman Suffrage and Women’s Rights.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Randy DuBurke

Andrew Helfer, as group editor at DC Comics, launched its Paradox Press imprint and the award-winning Big Books series, and worked on everything from Batman to The History of Violence.


SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Alistair M. Duckworth

Professor of English at the University of Florida, Gainesville, Alistair M. Duckworth is the author of "Howard's End": E. M. Forster's House of Fiction (1992) and The Improvement of the Estate: A Study of Jane Austen's Novels (1971), which Johns Hopkins reissued in 1994 as a paperback, with a new introduction by the author.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player