
NOTES ON ADVISORS AND CONTRIBUTORS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF POPULAR CULTURE
264
Religion, and Missions as well as a number of articles on jazz and
popular culture.
SANDERS, Joe Sutliff. Freelance writer; Ph.D. candidate, Universi-
ty of Kentucky; author of various speculative fiction short stories as
well as theoretical studies of Tolkien and King.
SARGENT, Andrew. Teaching associate, Department of English,
University of California, Los Angeles; writes on film, popular cul-
ture, and American literature.
SCELFO, Julie. Instructor in Communication studies, New York
University; assistant editor, Brill’s Content.
SCHAFER, Elizabeth D. Independent scholar. Ph.D., American
history, Auburn University; graduate study, children’s literature,
Hollins University; co-author of Women Who Made A Difference in
Alabama (League of Women Voters, 1995), and ‘‘‘I’m Gonna Glory
in Learnin’: Academic Aspirations of African-American Characters
in Children’s Literature,’’ African American Review 32 (spring 1998).
SCHEEDER, Louis. Director of the Classical Studio, New York
University.
SCHIFF, James. Adjunct assistant professor, University of Cincin-
nati; author of Updike’s Version: Rewriting ‘‘The Scarlet Letter’’
(University of Missouri Press, 1992), Understanding Reynolds Price
(University of South Carolina Press, 1996), John Updike Revisited
(Twayne, 1998); editor, Critical Essays on Reynolds Price (G.K.
Hall, 1998).
SCHNAKENBERG, Robert E. Freelance writer; author of The
Encyclopedia Shatnerica (Renaissance Books, 1998).
SCHNEIDER, Steven. Freelance writer; Ph.D. student in philoso-
phy, Harvard University; author of articles in Paradoxa: Studies in
World Literary Genres and Other Voices: A Journal of Critical
Thought.
SCHRUM, Kelly. Freelance writer; doctoral student in history,
Johns Hopkins University; emphases in twentieth-century United
States social and cultural history, consumer culture, youth, and
gender; author of ‘‘Teena Means Business: Teenage Girls’ Culture
and Seventeen Magazine, 1944-1950’’ in Delinquents and Debu-
tantes: Twentieth-Century American Girls’ Cultures, edited by Sherrie
A. Inness (NYU Press, 1998); writing dissertation, ‘‘Some Wore
Bobby Sox: The Development of Teenage Girls’ Cultures in the
United States, 1930-1960.’’
SCHURK, William L. Professor/sound recordings archivist, Bowl-
ing Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio; co-author, Tar-
nished Gold (Transaction, 1986); associate editor of Popular Music
and Society, and on the editorial boards of Journal of Popular
Culture, Journal of American Culture, and Popular Culture and
Libraries.
SCODARI, Christine. Associate professor of communication, Flori-
da Atlantic University; author of an unpublished work titled Serial
Monogamy: Soap Opera Lifespan, and the Gendered Politics of
Fantasy, and numerous scholarly articles relating to popular culture.
SCOTT, Alison M. Head librarian and associate professor, Popular
Culture Library, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green,
Ohio; co-editor, The Atomic Age Opens: American Culture Confronts
the Atomic Bomb (University Press of America, 1997) and author of
articles on popular culture in libraries and the history of the book.
SCOTT, Randall W. Original catalog librarian and comic art bibli-
ographer, Special Collections Division, Michigan State University
Libraries, East Lansing; author, A Subject Index to Comic Books and
Related Material (Michigan State University Libraries, 1975), Comic
Books and Strips, an Information Sourcebook (Oryx Press, 1988),
Comics Librarianship, a Handbook (McFarland Press, 1990), and
The Comic Art Collection Catalog (Greenwood Press, 1993).
SEARS, Ann. Professor of music, Wheaton College, Norton, Massa-
chusetts; review editor for the College Music Society Journal Sympo-
sium; contributor of articles to scholarly journals.
SEFCOVIC, E. M. I. Assistant professor of journalism and media
studies, Florida Atlantic University; 20 years as a reporter and editor
for Hearst, Globe, and Cox newspapers (using byline Enid Sefcovic);
academic publications and conference papers in the areas of labor
rhetoric and culture, and women’s aging and health issues.
SEGAL, Eric J. Freelance writer; doctoral candidate, Department of
Art History, University of California, Los Angeles.
SENF, Carol A. Associate professor, School of Literature, Commu-
nication, and Culture, The Georgia Institute of Technology; author
of Dracula: Between Tradition and Modernism (Twayne, 1998),
The Critical Response to Bram Stoker (Greenwood, 1994), and
The Vampire in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction (The Popular
Press, 1988).
SEUL, Tim. Assistant professor of government, Adams State Col-
lege, Alamosa, Colorado.
SHASHKO, Alexander. Freelance writer; doctoral candidate, Ameri-
can History, University of Michigan.
SHAUF, Michele S. Associate professor, School of Literature,
Communication, and Culture, Georgia Institute of Technology; edi-
tor, Computers, Ethics, and Society (Oxford University Press, 1997).
SHAW, Taylor. Freelance writer.
SHEEHAN, Anne. Freelance writer; graduate student, Department
of English, University of California, Los Angeles; writes on nine-
teenth century American literature and culture.
SHEEHAN, Steven T. Freelance writer; Ph.D. candidate, Indiana
University, Bloomington; writing dissertation on consumerism and
masculinity in American culture.
SHELTON, Pamela. Freelance writer and editor, Avon, Connecticut.
SHERMAN, Sandra. Freelance writer; student, University of Cali-
fornia, Los Angeles.
SHINDO, Charles J. Associate professor of history, Louisiana State
University; author of Dust Bowl Migrants in the American Imagina-
tion (University Press of Kansas, 1997).
SHUPP, Mike. Former aerospace engineer; graduate student, An-
thropology Department, California State University, Northridge;
author of With Fate Conspire, Morning of Creation, Soldier of
Another Fortune, Death’s Gray Land, and The Last Reckoning (Del
Rey Books, 1986-91).