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  • Contributors

Chiara Alfano is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at Kingston University London specializing in the relationships between literature, philosophy, and psychoanalysis. Her research interests lie in the infant as an object of study and as metaphor. Her latest project traces the figure of the infant through Cavell's work to give a new, psychoanalytically attuned account of ordinary language philosophy.

Kimberly Quiogue Andrews is Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Washington College. She is currently working on a book that explores the interplay between modes of thinking in the academic humanities and contemporary experimental poetic practice. She has published essays on translation theory, avant-garde film, and creative writing pedagogy, and her poems have appeared in a wide variety of journals.

Niklas Forsberg is Head of Research at the Centre for Ethics as Study in Human Value at the University of Pardubice. He is the author of Language Lost and Found: On Iris Murdoch and the Limits of Philosophical Discourse (2013) and has published papers on Austin, Cavell, Coetzee, Collingwood, Derrida, Emerson, and Wittgenstein, among others.

Matthew Rubery is Professor of Modern Literature at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author of The Untold Story of the Talking Book (2016) and editor of Audiobooks, Literature, and Sound Studies (2011). He also cocurated an exhibition titled "How We Read: A Sensory History of Books for Blind People." His current projects include a coedited collection of essays on reading in the twenty-first century and a book on neurological reading disorders.

Dennis Yi Tenen is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. His teaching and research happen at the intersection of people, texts, and technologies. He is the author of Plain Text: The Poetics of Computation (2017) and the cofounder of Columbia's Group for Experimental Methods in the Humanities.

Ross Wilson is Lecturer in Criticism in the Faculty of English, University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Trinity College. He is the author of Shelley and the Apprehension of Life (2013) and of essays on poetry, poetics, and literary theory. He is currently writing a book on genres of literary criticism since 1750. [End Page 165]

Wendy Veronica Xin is a Lecturer in the Department of English at the University of California, Berkeley. She has completed a book manuscript titled The Secret Lives of Plot, and her work has also appeared or is forthcoming in NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction and The International Journal of Scottish Screen Studies. [End Page 166]

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