TOM TOREMANS is associate professor of English literature and literary translation at the University of Leuven, Belgium. He has published on (post-)Romantic British literature, pseudotranslation, trauma theory, and refugee writing.
MIGUEL MOTA, associate professor of English Language and Literatures at the University of British Columbia, is the author of The Cinema of Malcolm Lowry, co-author Paul Tiessen (U of British Columbia P, 1992); co-editor, with Paul Tiessen, of The 1940 Under the Volcano: A Critical Edition (U of Ottawa P, 2015); and co-editor, with Richard J. Lane, of Malcolm Lowry’s Poetics of Space: New Critical Essays (U of Ottawa P, 2016). He is the author of articles on British literature and film under Thatcher, the screenplay within print and film cultures, the authorial online subject, the screenplays and films of Derek Jarman, Peter Greenaway, Mike Leigh and others. He is currently working on a book on the production of the postcolonial liminal subject in contemporary British literature.
KEVIN SPENCER is an assistant professor in the College of Liberal Arts at Wenzhou-Kean University. His work engages the emerging field of fiction and philosophy, with an emphasis on the origins and legacy of existentialism, the realist novel, and the ethics of fiction.
JEFF NOH is a doctoral candidate in the department of English at McGill University and visiting assistant professor of English at Clark University. He is writing a dissertation on lost and unfinished novels by Black, Jewish, and Asian American writers during the Cold War.
SARAH DIMICK is an assistant professor of English at Harvard University. Her research, based in Anglophone literatures of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, focuses on literary portrayals of climate change and environmental justice. She is writing a book titled “Unseasonable: Climate Arrhythmias in Global Literatures,” which analyzes shifting temporal ecologies and the writing that emerges from disjointed times.
JESSICA E. TEAGUE is associate professor of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is the author of Sound Recording Technology and American Literature, from the Phonograph to the Remix (Cambridge UP, 2021), winner of a 2022 American Book Award, and has published articles on John Dos Passos, Amiri Baraka, August Wilson, and Charles Mingus. She is writing a book on the jazz history of Las Vegas.
KALYAN NADIMINTI, assistant professor of English at Northwestern University, has published articles on contemporary postcolonial Anglophone literatures, institutional histories, literary representations of human rights paradigms, and global migration. They are writing a monograph on literary humanitarianism, the politics of insurgency, and contemporary narrative form. Recently, they guest-edited a Post45/Contemporaries cluster called “Extraordinary Renditions” that meditates on the proliferating, global after-effects of the so-called War on Terror.