Contributors

ROGER BILL is a PhD student in the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology at Memorial University.

BARRY C. GAULTON is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, Memorial University.

MAARTEN GERRITSEN is originally from Holland and moved to Canada to undertake graduate work at the Department of History at Memorial University. His doctoral dissertation, which considered identity among members of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, was completed in 2008. Currently he is extending his research to include soldiers who served in World War II, Korea and more recent peacekeeping missions.

JOSHUA D. LALOR is a PhD candidate in the Department of Anthropology at Memorial University.

PATRICK MANNION is a PhD candidate in the department of History at the University of Toronto. His B.A. and M.A. research at Memorial University focused on Irish community and identity in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Newfoundland. His PhD project will expand this line of inquiry into a comparative study of Irish ethnic populations in three north-Atlantic ports: St. John’s, Newfoundland, Halifax, Nova Scotia and Portland, Maine, 1850-1922.

CHRIS MARTIN graduated with a Master of Arts in History from Memorial University in 2008. He currently resides in St. John’s.

AARON F. MILLER is a historical archaeologist and PhD candidate at Memorial University.

HELENE STAVELEY earned a PhD in Canadian Fiction from Memorial University, where she currently teaches. She had previously worked for twelve years in Canada’s children’s book trade as a buyer and bookseller.