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  • Contributors

Karim Abuawad is an assistant professor at the Department of English Languages and Literature at Birzeit University. He teaches courses on British and American literature, in addition to academic writing. His research interests include critical theory, Arabic and the Anglophone-Arabic novel, nationalism, immigrant narratives, and postcolonial studies. He holds a PhD in comparative literature.

David Bordelon is an associate professor of English at Ocean County College. The author of several articles and chapters on nineteenth-century print culture and reader reception, he is currently working on a book applying these approaches to a transatlantic subject: Charles Dickens and Nineteenth-Century America: The Great Actuality of the Current Imagination.

Jack Dudley is an assistant professor of English at Mount St. Mary’s University in Emmitsburg, Maryland. His research interests include modern and contemporary British, American, and global literature as well as literary theory. His current project traces the interrelationship of secularism, postsecularism, and subjectivity in twentieth- and twenty-first-century literary history.

David Hollingshead is a PhD candidate in the Department of English at Brown University, where he is writing a dissertation about transatlantic naturalism and nineteenth-century biopolitical institutions.

Dana Medoro is an associate professor of American literature at the University of Manitoba. She is currently completing a monograph titled Antebellum Abortion: Open Secrets in Poe and Hawthorne, under contract with the University of New Hampshire Press.

Sydney Miller is a PhD candidate in English at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is currently working on her dissertation, tentatively titled “Weather Ex Machina: Climatic Determinism and the Fiction of Causality in the Twentieth-Century Novel.” [End Page 145]

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