Corina Stan is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Duke University, USA. She is the author of
The Art of Distances. Ethical Thinking in Twentieth-Century Literature (2018) and of articles published in
Comparative Literature Studies,
New German Critique,
English Studies,
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, Modern Language Notes,
The European Journal of English Studies,
Etudes britanniques,
Critical Inquiry,
Philosophy and Literature,
NOVEL, several collective volumes, as well as public-oriented venues such
as
The Point,
Aeon,
LA Times and the
Los Angeles Review of Books. Between 2017 and 2020, she was
co-director of the Representing Migration Humanities Lab at Duke University, funded by a
Humanities Unbounded Mellon grant.
Charlotte Sussman is Professor of English at Duke University, USA. She is the author of three books—Peopling the World: Representing Human Mobility from Milton to Malthus (2020); Eighteenth-Century British Literature, 1660-1789 (2011); and Consuming Anxieties: Consumer Protest, Gender, and British Slavery, 1713-1833 (2000) —and the co-editor, with Jillian Heydt-Stevenson, of Recognizing the Romantic Novel: New Histories of British Fiction, 1780-1830 (2008). Her articles on eighteenth-century literature, colonialism, migration, and slavery have appeared in PMLA, Modern Philology, ELH, Cultural Critique, Nineteenth-Century Literature, and other journals and edited collections. Between 2017 and 2020, she was co-director of the Representing Migration Humanities Lab at Duke University, funded by a Humanities Unbounded Mellon grant.