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  • Contributors

Susan Cooke Weeber is a doctoral candidate in English at The Pennsylvania State University. She has written articles on Philip K. Dick and Langston Hughes. Her dissertation is titled “Poetics of Interruption: Media and Form in Twentieth-Century American Literature.” An interview with Nathaniel Mackey that she co-conducted is forthcoming in 2016.

Emily Johansen, associate professor of English at Texas A&M University, is the author of Cosmopolitanism and Place: Spatial Forms in Contemporary Anglophone Fiction (Palgrave, 2014). She has recently published articles on Kazuo Ishiguro, Andrea Levy, and neoliberal cosmopolitanism. She is co-editor, with Alissa Karl, of Neoliberalism and the Novel (Routledge, 2016).

Jungha Kim, assistant professor of English language and literature at Seoul National University, has published articles on trauma and affect, Herman Melville, Jane Jeong Trenka, and Jhumpa Lahiri. She has an article forthcoming on Ruth Ozeki.

Angela Hume is a doctoral candidate at the University of California, Davis. Her dissertation explores the intersection of lyric theory and environmental activism in the writings of post–1945 American women poets.

David Winters is a doctoral candidate in English literature at Pembroke College, Cambridge. He is the author of Infinite Fictions (Zero Books, 2015) and articles on literary theory and contemporary American fiction.

Michael Leong, assistant professor of English at the University at Albany, SUNY, is the author of two volumes of poetry, Cutting Time with a Knife (Black Square, 2012) and Words on Edge (Black Square, forthcoming). He has published articles on conceptual poetry, documentary poetry, and surrealism. He is a 2016 NEA Literature Translation fellow.

Sarah Chihaya, assistant professor of English at Princeton University, has published articles on Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels and on apocalyptic young adult fiction. She is at work on a book manuscript titled “The Unseen World: Metanarrative and the Contemporary Novel.”

Crystal Parikh, associate professor of English at New York University, is the author of An Ethics of Betrayal: The Politics of Otherness in Emergent U.S. Literatures and Culture (Fordham, 2009), which received the MLA Prize in U.S. Latina and Latino and Chicana and Chicano Literary and Cultural Studies. She is co-editor, with Daniel Y. Kim, of The Cambridge Companion to Asian American Literature (2015). Her book Writing Human Rights: Minor Literatures and the Global Politics of Culture is forthcoming from the University of Minnesota Press. [End Page 162]

Praseeda Gopinath, associate professor of English at Binghamton University, SUNY, is the author of Scarecrows of Chivalry: English Masculinities after Empire (Virginia, 2013). She has published articles on masculinity, form, postwar British fiction, and Hindi cinema. She is at work on a book titled “Afterlives of the Indian Gentleman: Middle-Class Masculinities and India.” [End Page 163]

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