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Frank Wedekind

Frank Wedekind contributed to Spring Awakening from Faber & Faber.

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J. Robert Wegs

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Stephen Weidenborner

Stephen Weidenborner was a professor of English at Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York, for over thirty years. He coauthored several other composition textbooks with Domenick Caruso, also a former professor of English at Kingsborough Community College.

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Ye Weili

Ye Weili is Associate Professor of History and Women's Studies, University of Massachusetts, Boston and the recipient of a Fulbright research award.

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Lawrence Weinstein

Lawrence Weinstein taught the first-year writing course at Harvard University and cofounded Harvard’s Writing Center. For nearly thirty years, he was a member of the English Department at Bentley University, where he directed the Writing Center and the Expository Writing Program. His book on the teaching of writing, Writing at the Threshold, was a longtime bestseller of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE). Other books by Weinstein include Grammar for the Soul, Grammar Moves (with his colleague Thomas Finn), and Writing Doesn’t Have to Be Lonely. Plays by Weinstein have been performed in Boston, Dallas, and New York.

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Alan Weisman

Alan Weisman teaches international journalism at the University of Arizona. He is also an award-winning journalist whose reports have appeared in Harper’s, The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, Discover, and on NPR, among others. Formerly a contributing editor to the Los Angeles Times Magazine, he is now a senior radio producer for Homelands Productions.

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Christian R. Weisser

Christian Weisser (PhD University of South Florida) is an Associate Professor of English at Penn State Berks. He serves as Coordinator of both the Professional Writing Program and the Writing Across the Curriculum Program. Dr. Weisser is the Editor of Composition Forum, a peer-reviewed scholarly journal in rhetoric and composition. His research focuses upon the ways in which writing can move beyond traditional disciplinary and academic boundaries, and he has authored or co-authored six books and numerous articles on this subject. He enjoys teaching courses in technical, business, and electronic writing, basic and advanced composition, and environmental rhetoric.

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Peter Wende

Peter Wende was formerly Professor of History at Frankfurt University and Director of the German Historical Institute in London. He is now retired and lives in Frankfurt.

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Edith Wharton

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Patricia White

Patricia White is Associate Professor and Chair of the Program in Film and Media Studies at Swarthmore College. She is the author of Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Indiana UP, 1999) and numerous articles and chapters on film theory and culture. She is writing a book on women filmmakers and world cinema. She is a member of the editorial collective of the leading English-language journal of feminism and film, Camera Obscura, and she currently chairs the board of the nonprofit feminist media arts organization and independent distributor Women Make Movies. With Timothy Corrigan, coauthor of The Film Experience, she is editing an anthology of essays in classical and contemporary film theory.

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Richard White

Richard White, professor of History at the University of Washington in Seattle, is the author of The Middle Ground and It's Your Misfortune and None of My Own and the recipient of the Albert J. Beveridge and Western Heritage awards.
 
 

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Edward M. White

Edward M. White has written or edited thirteen books and about one hundred articles or book chapters on writing, writing instruction, and writing assessment.  In 2007, he coedited (with a former student) his fifth textbook for college writing students, The Promise of America, and fully revised the fourth edition of his book for teachers, Assigning, Responding, Evaluating.  His best-known books are Teaching and Assessing Writing, which won a Shaughnessey award from the Modern Language Association in 1994, and Assessment of Writing, an MLA research volume, in 1996.   After taking early retirement in 1997 as an emeritus professor of English at the CSU San Bernardino campus, where he was named “Outstanding Professor” in 1994, he joined the University of Arizona English department, where he has taught graduate courses in writing assessment, writing research, and writing program administration, completing his fifty-first year of college teaching in 2009.  Now a visiting scholar at the University of Arizona, he is coauthoring a book on evaluating writing programs and is continuing to publish articles and book chapters.

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Robin White

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Tom Wicker

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Robert H. Wiebe

Robert H. Wiebe, professor of history at Northwestern University, is the author of The Segmented Society and Self Rule: A Cultural History of American Democracy.

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