TOM LUTZ is the Editor in Chief of the Los Angeles Review of
Books, a nonprofit, multimedia literary and cultural arts magazine
that combines the great American tradition of the serious book
review with the evolving technologies of the web. Readers of the
LARB Quarterly Journal join a community of writers, critics,
journalists, artists, filmmakers, and scholars dedicated to
promoting the best that is thought and written, with an enduring
commitment to the intellectual rigor, the incisiveness, and the
power of the written word.
SARAH MESLE (PhD, Northwestern) is faculty at USC and Senior
Humanities Editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books.
MERVE EMRE is a Visiting Fellow at the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences. In 2016, she will be an assistant professor of English at
McGill University.
CALEB SMITH is professor of English at Yale University. He is the
author of The Prison and the American Imagination (Yale University
Press, 2009) and The Oracle and the Curse: A Poetics of Justice
from the Revolution to the Civil War (Harvard University Press,
2013). His essays on contemporary culture have appeared in BOMB,
Paper Monument, Yale Review, and Avidly.org.
NAMWALI SERPELL is an associate professor of English at UC
Berkeley. Her writing has been published in McSweeney's, The
Believer, Bidoun, Callaloo, Tin House, n+1, The Caine Prize
Anthology, and a collection, Should I Go to Grad School? . Her
first published short story, "Muzungu," was selected for The Best
American Short Stories 2009, shortlisted for the 2010 Caine Prize
for African Literature, and anthologized in The Uncanny Reader (St.
Martins, 2015). In 2011, she was selected to be one of six
recipients of the Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award for women
writers. Serpell is currently working on a book of essays, Losing
Face, and a novel, The Furrows.
MICHAEL W. CLUNE's most recent critical book is Writing Against
Time. His first work of creative nonfiction, White Out, was named a
Best Book of 2013 by The New Yorker, NPR, The Millions, and
elsewhere. His most recent book is Gamelife. He teaches at Case
Western Reserve University.
PETER COVIELLO teaches at the University of Illinois, Chicago. He
has written about Walt Whitman, the history of sexuality, queer
children, 18th- and 19th-century American literature, Mormon
polygamy, and Steely Dan. His most recent book is Tomorrow's
Parties: Sex and the Untimely in Nineteenth-Century America, a
finalist for a 2013 Lambda Literary Award in LGBT Studies.
KATHRYN BOND STOCKTON is Distinguished Professor of English and
Associate Vice President for Equity and Diversity at the University
of Utah, where she teaches queer theory, theories of race, the
19th-century novel, and 20th-century literature and film. Her most
recent books, Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame: Where "Black"
Meets "Queer" and The Queer Child, or Growing Sideways in the
Twentieth Century were both finalists for the Lambda Literary Award
in LGBT Studies (2007 and 2010).
VIRGINIA JACKSON is UCI Endowed Chair in Rhetoric in the
departments of English and Comparative Literature at the University
of California, Irvine. She is the author of Dickinson's Misery: A
Theory of Lyric Reading (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2005) and the co-editor (with Yopie Prins) of The Lyric Theory
Reader: A Critical Anthology (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 2014). Her book Before Modernism: Nineteenth-Century
American Poetry in Public is forthcoming from Princeton, and she is
now at work on After Poetry, a book on 21st-century American
poetics.
JOHANNA DRUCKER is the inaugural Breslauer Professor of
Bibliographical Studies in the Department of Information Studies at
UCLA. She is internationally known for her work in the history of
graphic design, typography, experimental poetry, fine art, and
digital humanities. In addition, she has a reputation as a book
artist, and her limited edition works are in special collections
and libraries worldwide. Her most recent titles include SpecLab:
Digital Aesthetics and Speculative Computing and Graphic Design
History: A Critical Guide.
KENNETH GOLDSMITH is the author of eight books of poetry, founding
editor of the online archive UbuWeb, and the editor of I'll Be Your
Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, which is the basis for
an opera, Trans-Warhol, which premiered in Geneva in March of 2007.
Goldsmith is also the host of a weekly radio show on New York
City's WFMU. He teaches writing at the University of Pennsylvania,
where he is a senior editor of PennSound, an online poetry
archive.
DIANA FUSS is Louis W. Fairchild Class of '24 Professor of English
at Princeton University. Fuss is the author of Essentially Speaking
(Routledge, 1989), Identification Papers, and The Sense of an
Interior: Four Writers and the Rooms that Shaped Them. Her most
recent book, Dying Modern: A Meditation on Elegy, is forthcoming
from Duke University Press. Fuss is also the editor of several
volumes: Human, All Too Human, Pink Freud, and Inside/Out.
KENNETH W. WARREN is Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service
Professor of English at the University of Chicago.
JONATHAN FREEDMAN is Professor of English at the University of
Michigan.
TAVIA NYONG'O is a cultural critic and an Associate Professor in
the Department of Performance Studies at New York University. He
writes on art, music, politics, culture, and theory. His first
book, The Amalgamation Waltz: Race, Performance, and the Ruses of
Memory, won the Errol Hill Award for best book in African American
theatre and performance studies. He is completing a study of
fabulation in black aesthetics and embarking on another on queer
wildness. Nyong'o has published in venues such as Radical History
Review, Criticism, GLQ, TDR, Women & Performance, WSQ, The Nation,
Triple Canopy, The New Inquiry, and n+1. He is co-editor of the
journal Social Text and the Sexual Cultures book series at New York
University press. He regularly blogs at Bully Bloggers.
EVAN CALDER WILLIAMS is a writer, artist, and translator. He is the
author of Combined and Uneven Apocalypse, Roman Letters, and,
forthcoming, Against the Flood: The Italian Critique of Gender and
Capital and Donkey Time.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |