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  • Contributors

Tyrell Haberkorn is a Fellow in Political and Social Change at the Australian National University. She writes about state violence, human rights, and dissident cultural politics in Thailand. She is the author of Revolution Interrupted: Farmers, Students, Law, and Violence in Northern Thailand (2011) and Voices of a Free Media: The First Ten Years of Prachatai (2014), and is one of the editors of Reflections of the Past: Selected Poems from Sattrisan Magazine, 1970–1976 (2013). She is currently completing a book about the history of impunity for state violence since the end of the absolute monarchy in Thailand. In addition to her academic work, she is a frequent contributor of translations of writing by political prisoners, cultural commentary, and poetry to the online newspaper Prachatai.

EuyRyung Jun is collegiate assistant professor in the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences at Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH). Her research centers on migration, citizenship, and governmentality. She has published articles in FOCAAL Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology, 경제와 사회 (Economy and Society), and Anthropological Quarterly (forthcoming).

Sandra So Hee Chi Kim is a PhD candidate and a Korean Foundation fellow in the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. Her research interests [End Page 721] include war and memory, ethnicity and identity, diaspora and phenomenology, and trans-pacific postcolonial studies in the contexts of Korean American literature, Korean literature and culture, and American studies.

Ratheesh Radhakrishnan is associate professor with the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (Mumbai, India). His work has been published in several journals, including Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, Bioscope: South Asian Screen Studies, South Asian Popular Culture, Contributions to Indian Sociology, and Thapasam: Journal of Kerala Studies, as well as in edited anthologies.

Fan Yang is an assistant professor in the Department of Media and Communication Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Her work on China, media and cultural studies, and globalization has appeared in Theory, Culture, and Society; New Media and Society; Quarterly Review of Film and Video; and Critical Studies in Media Communication. She is the author of Faked in China: Nation Branding, Counterfeit Culture, and Globalization (2016). [End Page 722]

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