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  • Contributors

Tiffany Allan lives in rural New Zealand and is interested in intersections of identity between class and gender. She has completed a Master of Creative Writing with Distinction through Massey University. She has been published in takahē and was Highly Commended in the Sunday Star Times Short Story Competition.

Iain Britton is the author of six collections of poems. Recent works have been published or are forthcoming in Landfall, Brief, The New Zealand Yearbook, Cordite, foam:e, Southerly Journal, Harvard Review, Poetry (Chicago), Jacket 2, the New York Times, DMQ Review, Stand, Agenda, Poetry Wales, Long Poem Magazine, the Fortnightly Review, and the Journal of Poetics Research (Australia). His collection The Intaglio Poems was published by Hesterglock Press (United Kingdom) in 2017.

Yingjie M. Cheng recently completed her postgraduate research at the University of New South Wales (Sydney). Her research focuses on Antipodean literary modernism and looks at a group of twentieth-century Australian and New Zealand women writers and their engagements in literary modernism. In her dissertation, Yingjie attempts to reveal the separate but coeval emergence of literary modernism in Australia and New Zealand. Yingjie is currently affiliated with Shanghai International Studies University.

Jennifer Compton was born in Wellington and now lives in Melbourne. Recent work has appeared in the Moth, Poetry New Zealand, The Canberra Times, Flash Cove, Not Very Quiet, Cicerone, Four W, Verity La, and Poetry Shelf.

Nicholas Duddy is a writer from the Adelaide Hills. He completed his MFA in writing for performance at the National Institute of Dramatic Art. A 2020 John Monash Scholar, he is now a DPhil in English candidate at the University of Oxford.

Diane Fahey's The Wing Collection: New and Selected Poems and The Stone Garden: Poems from Clare were shortlisted for major poetry awards in Australia in 2012 and 2014. She has won the Newcastle Poetry Prize, the Wesley Michel Wright Award, and the ACT Judith Wright Poetry Prize. She took part in Australian Poetry's 2013 International Poetry Tour of Ireland. Her most recent collection is November Journal.

Kathryn Fry has poems in various periodicals including Antipodes (2016) and the Newcastle Poetry Prize anthologies of 2014 and 2016. Her poems are also in Cordite Poetry Review (2016) and Not Very Quiet (2017, 2018). Her first collection is Green Point Bearings (Ginninderra Press, 2018).

E. A. Gleeson has published three collections of poems, as well as essays, articles, and reviews. She has recently been researching, traveling to, and writing about Estonia. She works in the funeral industry.

Weihsin Gui is an associate professor of English at the University of California–Riverside, where he is also the current director of Southeast Asian Studies. He is the author of National [End Page 456] Consciousness and Literary Cosmopolitics: Postcolonial Literature in a Global Moment (2013) and has published essays in several journals such as Journal of Postcolonial Writing, LIT: Literature Interpretation Theory, Interventions, the Global South, Postcolonial Text, Moving Worlds, and Textual Practice.

Sneja Gunew has taught in England, Australia, and Canada. She has published widely on multicultural, postcolonial, and feminist critical theory and is Professor Emerita of English and the Institute for Social Justice at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Her books include Framing Marginality: Multicultural Literary Studies (1994) and Haunted Nations: The Colonial Dimensions of Multiculturalisms (2004). She has been based in Canada since 1993, and her current work is on comparative multiculturalisms and diasporic literatures. Her most recent book is titled Post-Multicultural Writers as Neo-Cosmopolitan Mediators (2017).

Eunice Ying Ci Lim is pursuing a PhD in comparative literature and Asian studies at Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests include translingualism, multimodal literacies, and decolonial studies, with a focus on Southeast Asian and diasporic Asian literature and culture. She earned her master's degree in English at Nanyang Technological University.

Paul Mitchell's latest book is a novel, We. Are. Family. (MidnightSun Publishing, 2016). He has also published a short-story collection and three collections of poetry. A collection of essays, Matters of Life and Faith, is forthcoming from Coventry Press in 2021.

Cheryl Narumi Naruse is an assistant professor of English and the Mellon Assistant Professor in the Humanities at Tulane University. Her research...

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