Search by
  •  

Our Authors

Browse Alphabetically:


Alexis de Tocqueville

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Gary Tomlinson

Joseph Kerman and Gary Tomlinson are leading musicologists and music educators. Kerman, Professor Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley, served two terms as Chair of the Music Department, and Tomlinson has done the same at the University of Pennsylvania. Both are known as inspirational and wide-ranging teachers; between them, their course offerings encompass harmony and ear training, opera, world music, interdisciplinary studies, seminars in music history and criticism, and—many times—Introduction to Music for nonmajor students.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Matthew Tontonoz

Matthew Tontonoz has been a development editor for textbooks in introductory biology, cell biology, evolution, and environmental science. He received his B.A. in biology from Wesleyan University, where he did research on the neurobiology of birdsong, and his M.A. in the history and sociology of science from the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied the history of the behavioral and life sciences. His writing has appeared in Science as Culture. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Jason Tougaw

Jason Tougaw is Associate Professor of English and Director of the Writing Across the Curriculum program at Queens College. He is author of Strange Cases: The Medical Case History and the British Novel (Routledge, 2006) and coeditor, with Nancy K. Miller, of Extremities: Trauma, Testimony, and Community (University of Illinois Press). Currently, his writing focuses on connections between neurobiology and the arts, new media pedagogies, and creative nonfiction. He has published essays and creative nonfiction in JAC, Computers & Composition, a/b: Auto/biography Studies, and the anthology Boys to Men: Gay Men Write about Growing Up.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Angela Trethewey

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Angela Trethwey

Angela Trethewey is associate professor in the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University. Her award-winning research exploring the relationships among organizational communication, power, and gendered identities has been published in flagship journals in the field, including Journal of Applied Communication Research, Management Communication Quarterly, and Communication Monographs. She has also edited special issues on topics such as translating scholarship into practice and living with organizational contradictions. Recently, she received the Master Teacher Award from the Western States Communication Association.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Eric Tribunella

Eric L. Tribunella is an associate professor of English at the University of Southern Mississippi.  His research interests include children’s and young adult literature, lesbian and gay literature, and gender and sexuality studies.  He is the author of Melancholia and Maturation: The Use of Trauma in American Children's Literature (U. of Tennessee Press, 2010) and has published a number of articles in journals such as Children’s Literature, Children’s Literature Association Quarterly, The Lion and the Unicorn, and Children’s Literature in Education.    

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Joseph S. Tuman

Joseph S. Tuman is Professor of Speech and Communication Studies at San Francisco State University, where he has been honored with the Jacobus tenBroek Society Award for Excellence in Teaching. Tuman regularly appears on television as a political commentator and is the author of numerous books, including Political Communication in American Campaigns, and Communicating Terror: The Rhetorical Dimensions of Terrorism. In addition, Tuman has taught at the University of California at Berkeley, The New School, and Paris II, the top law school in France. He has published widely in the field of communication studies and has previously operated a private consulting practice for individuals, businesses, and government entities seeking assistance with speech writing, communication strategies, and presentation skills.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


John Turner

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Mark Twain

Mark Twain was a humorist, satirist, lecturer and writer. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. During his lifetime, Twain became a friend to presidents, artists, leading industrialists and European royalty.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Mary Tyler

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Marc Van De Mieroop

Marc Van De Mieroop (PhD, Yale University) is Professor of History at Columbia University. His research focuses on the ancient history of the Near East from a long-term perspective and extends across traditionally established disciplinary boundaries. Among his many works are The Ancient Mesopotamian City; Cuneiform Texts and the Writing of History; A History of the Ancient Near East; The Eastern Mediterranean in the Age of Ramesses II; and A History of Ancient Egypt.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Wanda Van Goor

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Helen Vendler

Helen Vendler, critic and scholar of English-language poetry from the seventeenth century to the present, is A. Kingsley Porter University Professor at Harvard University–the first woman to hold a University Professorship, the highest academic distinction Harvard bestows. In 2004 the National Endowment for the Humanities named her the Jefferson Lecturer, the highest academic distinction conferred by the Federal Government.  She was poetry critic of The New Yorker from 1978-1990, and was a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board from 1990-1999, often serving before those years on Pulitzer Prize juries for poetry.  She has written scholarly studies of William Shakespeare, Seamus Heaney, and Emily Dickinson, and has received the National Book Critics' Circle Award for Criticism in 1981, as well as the Truman Capote Prize and the Lowell Prize of the MLA.  Her criticism has been collected in several volumes, including Part of Nature, Part of Us; The Music of What Happens; and Soul Says.  Her 2007 Mellon Lectures have been published under the title Last Looks, Last Books: Stevens, Plath, Bishop, Merrill.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Janet Vigna

Janet Vigna, Ph.D. is an associate professor in the biology department at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan, where she is also a member of the Integrated Science Program. She has been teaching university-level biology for 14 years, with a special interest in effectively teaching biology to nonmajors. Her current research focuses on the environmental effects of the biological pesticide Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis on natural frog communities. She received her Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of Iowa.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player

*AP is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this product.