础濒-厂丑腻产耻蝉丑迟墨 (d. 388/998 or 389/999) was a scribe from Baghdad who traveled around Iraq, southern Anatolia, and Syria before moving to Cairo, where he became a court companion and librarian to the Fatimid caliph al-士Az墨z.
Hilary Kilpatrick received her DPhil from Oxford. She has taught at universities in the UK, the Netherlands, and Switzerland and is now an independent scholar based in Lausanne, Switzerland. She has published a major study of al-I峁ah膩n墨鈥檚 Book of Songs and many articles on modern, classical, and Ottoman Arabic literature.
Wiebke Denecke is Professor of East Asian Literatures at MIT and the founding editor-in-chief of the Hsu-Tang Library of Classical Chinese Literature. Her publications include The Dynamics of Masters Literature: Early Chinese Thought from Confucius to Han Feizi, and as editor, The Norton Anthology of World Literature and The Oxford Handbook of Classical Chinese Literature.