Contributors E. N. ANDERSON is Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Riv- erside. He has conducted field research in Hong Kong, Malaysia, and elsewhere throughout the Pacific Rim. His major work is The Food of China. Among earlier works are The Floating Worlds of Castle Peak Bay, Essays on South China's Boat People, and, with Marja L. Anderson, Mountains and Waters: The Cultural Ecology of South Coastal China. SUSAN E. BROWNELL, a former nationally-ranked U.S. track and field ath- lete, won a gold medal for Beijing City in the 1986 National College Games. In 1988 she took a Senior Advanced Studies Degree at the Beijing Institute of Physical Education. She earned a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from the Uni- versity of California, Santa Barbara, in 1990. She has taught at Middlebury, University of Washington, and Yale, and is currently completing Training the Body for China: Sports in the Moral Order of the People's Republic. CAO ZHENGWEN, correspondent for Xinmin Evening Paper, is a member of the Chinese Writers' Association and a member of the Council of the Popular Literature Society. To date he has published 25 works of fiction. He is best known for his novel The Dilemma of Men in Their Forties and his criticism One Hundred and Eight Heroes in Jin Yong's Novels. J. A. ENGLISH-LUECK earned a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and has done research in Suriname, the United States, and the People's Republic of China in ethnomedicine and psy- chological anthropology. Assistant Professor at San Jose State University, she -407- |