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Contributors
Eric Bulson is Andrew W. Mellon All-Claremont Chair in the Humanities in the Department of English at Claremont Graduate University. He is the author, most recently, of ‘Ulysses’ by Numbers (2020).
Debjani Ganguly is Professor of English at the University of Virginia. She is the author of Caste, Colonialism and Counter-Modernity (2005) and This Thing Called the World: The Contemporary Novel as Global Form (2016), and editor of the two-volume Cambridge History of World Literature (2021). She is also the general editor, with Francesca Orsini, of the book series Cambridge Studies in World Literature.
Ben Glaser is Associate Professor of English at Yale University. His work appears in ELH, PMLA, Victorian Poetry, modernism/modernity, and other venues. He is the author of Modernism’s Metronome: Meter and Twentieth-Century Poetics (2020), and coeditor with Jonathan Culler of Critical Rhythm (2019).
Rachel Greenspan is a psychoanalyst in private practice in New York. Her research explores global histories of psychoanalytic theory, practice, and pedagogy. Her recent work has appeared in Parapraxis, The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, and differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies.
Christina Lupton is Professor of Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of Copenhagen, author of Reading and the Making of Time in the Eighteenth Century (2018) and Love and the Novel (2022) and coauthor of Reading Novels During the Covid-19 Pandemic (2023). Her current project is Paid Leaves: Writing a Life Around 1968.
Gerard Passannante is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is the author of The Lucretian Renaissance: Philology and the Afterlife of Tradition (2011) and Catastrophizing: Materialism and the Making of Disaster (2019).
Nathan TeBokkel is a literary scholar, beekeeper, and melon farmer. He recently finished his PhD at the University of British Columbia, where his research was generously supported by the Vanier and Killam doctoral scholarships.
Nancy Yousef is Professor of English at Rutgers University. She is the author of Isolated Cases (2004), Romantic Intimacy (2013), and The Aesthetic Commonplace (2022). She is currently at work on Thinking in Words: Undisciplined Readings in Modern Philosophy.
期刊介绍:
New Literary History focuses on questions of theory, method, interpretation, and literary history. Rather than espousing a single ideology or intellectual framework, it canvasses a wide range of scholarly concerns. By examining the bases of criticism, the journal provokes debate on the relations between literary and cultural texts and present needs. A major international forum for scholarly exchange, New Literary History has received six awards from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals.