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Jane McGrail

April 25, 2019

Degrees

2017, BA English, College of the Holy Cross

Bio

Jane McGrail is a PhD student in Rhetoric, Composition, and Literacy Studies. Her research interests include the public humanities, cultural rhetorics, feminisms and rhetorics, community literacy studies, and engaged pedagogy.


Erin Piemont

October 30, 2018

Degrees

2018, BA English, Davidson College

Bio

Erin Piemont studies nineteenth- and twentieth-century United States poetry with a special interest in intersections between poetry and the visual arts. Her research explores art-historical considerations of self-portraiture as an alternative to the literary-critical category of lyric.


Curriculum Vitae / Resume

Edward Hyunsoo Yang

April 23, 2018

Degrees

2015, MA English, Claremont Graduate University

2012, BA English Literature and Political Science, Loyola Marymount University

Bio

Eddie is currently a PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. A scholar of British literature of the long eighteenth century, he has particular interests in: authenticity, experimentation with literary form and genre, the Gothic, the history of the novel, influences of popular culture, the material book, and narrative performance.

His dissertation project, entitled Creating Enchantment: a History of the Gothic and Inspiring Interactive Reading, explores the history of intellectual influences on the Gothic, the creative possibilities that writers have found in the genre, and how these writers subsequently experimented with the genre to create a particular reading experience. Bringing together archival research, narrative theory, reader-response theory, and sociological history of reading practices in the long-eighteenth century, he hopes to produce a project that examines how authorial innovation, alongside history of the material book—its paratextual elements, decisions made by publishers, and popular readership—have mediated interactive reading experiences of the Gothic novel in the long eighteenth century.


Publications:


Teaching Awards

  • Krista Turner Memorial Award for Excellence in Teaching, 2018.

Awards

  • English Teaching Assistant Award (Germany), The Fulbright Program, 2016-17.

Curriculum Vitae / Resume

Grant Glass

April 23, 2018

Degrees

May 2013, B.A. Literature, with Honors. Harvard University Extension, Cambridge, Mass.

Jan 2016, M.A. Digital Humanities with Merit. King’s College London, U.K.

Bio

I am a  Ph.D. student in English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, studying British literature and culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. My research traces contemporary use of generative machine learning technologies back to the eighteenth century, arguing that adaptation of literary texts drives notions of selfhood. I also work on bibliographic studies, the history of the book, computational literary studies, and digital humanities. I am also the Project Manager of the William Blake Archive, 


Teaching Awards

  • Tanner Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching by a Graduate Teaching Assistant,Office of the Provost, UNC-CH, 2020.
  • Student Undergraduate Teaching Award,Office of the Chancellor, UNC-CH, 2019.
  • C.S. Herschel Award for Course Design, Digital Humanities, University Writing Program, UNC-CH, 2019.
  • Syllabus of the Year-with Professor Jeanne Moskal, Office of Instructional Innovation, UNC-CH,. 2018.
  • Graduate Student Mentor Award, Office for Undergraduate Research, UNC-CH, 2018.