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  • Contributors

Chris A. Eng is Assistant Professor of English and the Emerson Faculty Fellow at Syracuse University. He received his PhD in English from The Graduate Center, CUNY. He is currently working on his book manuscript titled States of Provisionality: Improvising Queer Extravagance in Asian American Camps. In 2016–2017, he was a Post-Doctoral Research Associate in Asian American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

Suzanne Enzerink is a doctoral candidate in American studies at Brown University. Her dissertation, "Give Me Color: Fictions of Racial Ambiguity," explores literary and visual constructions of racial triangulation in the American Century.

Douglas S. Ishii is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies at Northwestern University with an affiliation in Gender and Sexuality Studies. He is completing his first manuscript on race, class, and panethnic Asian American arts activism from the 1970s to the present.

Ju Yon Kim is the Harris K. Weston Associate Professor in the Humanities at Harvard University. She is the author of The Racial Mundane: Asian American Performance and the Embodied Everyday (NYU Press, 2015), which received the 2016 Lois P. Rudnick Book Prize from the New England American Studies Association. Her articles have appeared or are forthcoming in Theatre Journal, Modern Drama, Journal of Transnational American Studies, Modernism/modernity, Theatre Survey, and Journal of Asian American Studies. She is currently working on a second book project titled Paper Performance: Suspicion and the Spaces of Asian American Theater. [End Page 479]

Yu Jung Lee is a postdoctoral fellow of Korean language and literature at Yonsei University, South Korea. Her dissertation is about Korean camp show women's transnational performances (American studies, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2016), and her primary research interests include comparative American studies, transnational studies of Asian women, popular music, and culture. Her articles are forthcoming in Inter-Asia Cultural Studies and Journal of Korean Studies.

Anna Pegler-Gordon is an Associate Professor at Michigan State University, teaching in the James Madison College and Asian Pacific American Studies Program. She is the author of In Sight of America: Photography and the Development of US Immigration Policy (University of California Press, 2009) and is currently completing a book project about Asians at Ellis Island.

Emily Raymundo is an Asian American Studies Postdoctoral Fellow at Dart-mouth College. Her current research focuses on Asian American culture within the racial and gendered formations of multiculturalism. Her work has also been published in Women & Performance and Theatre Journal.

Lily Anne Welty Tamai earned a doctorate in history from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her book is titled Military Industrial Intimacy: Mixed Race American Japanese, Eugenics and Transnational Identities (University of Nebraska Press, forthcoming). She has published chapters in several edited volumes and articles in Southern California Quarterly, Pan Japan, and Immigration Studies. She is currently a lecturer in Asian American Studies at UCLA.

Sarah D. Wald is Associate Professor of English and Environmental Studies at University of Oregon. She is the author of The Nature of California: Race, Citizenship, and Farming since the Dustbowl (University of Washington Press, 2016). [End Page 480]

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