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  • Contributors

Laura Brzyski is a native Philadelphian, a high-school English teacher, and choreographer of school musicals. In 2014, she received her Master of Arts in English from Lehigh University, specializing in medieval literature. Her poetry has been published in Weal and Vagabond City and her creative nonfiction in The Stonecoast Review. She serves as Poetry Editor for Alternating Current and reads poetry & creative nonfiction for Gigantic Sequins.

Benjamin D. Carson is a Professor of English at Bridgewater State University. He has published essays on Edith Wharton, Gilles Delueze and Felix Guattari, Gerald Vizenor, Ana Castillo, and Clarence Major. He is the co-editor (with Michael Y. Bennett) of Eugene O'Neill's One-Act Plays: New Critical Perspectives (Palgrave, 2012). He is at work on an essay on Danzy Senna's novel Caucasia.

Yeonsik Jung is Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature at Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, South Korea, where he teaches American literature and culture, literature and medicine, critical theory, and cinema. He is co-editor of The Journal of Criticism and Theory, and his essays on race and gender studies and medical humanities have appeared in, among others, Literature and Medicine, English Studies, Canadian Review of American Studies, ANQ, and The Explicator.

Eleanor Lang is Brooklyn-based photographer and writer. A veteran of New York's book publishing industry, she lives with her partner, poet and writer Bob Howe, and they visit Coney Island nearly every summer weekend.

Lauren Malone is a graduate student at Iowa State University in the Rhetoric and Professional Communication program. Her research interests include game-based learning, inclusive writing assessment, and business communication.

Ryan Muckerheide received his Ph.D. from Arizona State University in 2010. His research interests include medieval romance, the works of Sir Thomas Malory, and the influence of law on medieval literature.

Amy Parziale currently serves as Visiting Assistant Professor at Rollins College, teaching American literature, film, and cultural studies. Her research examines contemporary depictions of trauma. Previously she was a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Tulane University, researching representations [End Page 107] of Hurricane Katrina, and she received her Ph.D. at the University of Arizona.

Ilsu Sohn received his doctorate degree in English at the University of Washington in 2016. He is currently a lecturer of English at several universities in the Republic of Korea. He teaches courses on Modern and Victorian British literature, introduction to English literature, and English composition. He specializes in the Modern British and Victorian novel, Marxist studies, (post)colonial studies, and the novel theories. He has recently published essays in Journal of English Studies in Korea and English Language and Literature.

Bremen Vance is a Ph.D. student in the Rhetoric and Professional Communication program at Iowa State University. His research interests focus on multimodal writing practices and pedagogies. [End Page 108]

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