Nathan K. Hensley is Associate Professor of English at Georgetown University. He is the author of Forms of Empire: The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty (2016).
Philip Steer is Senior Lecturer in English at Massey University. His current book project is “Borders of Britishness: The Novel and Political Economy in the Victorian Settler Empire.”
Karen Pinkus is professor of romance studies and comparative literature at Cornell University. She is author of several books, including Fuel: A Speculative Dictionary (Minnesota, 2016).
Lynn Voskuil is Associate Professor of English at the University of Houston. She is the author of Acting Naturally: Victorian Theatricality and Authenticity (2004) and editor of Nineteenth- Century Energies: Literature, Technology, Culture (2016).
Jesse Oak Taylor is Associate Professor of English at the University of Washington. He is the author of The Sky of Our Manufacture: The London Fog in British Fiction from Dickens to Woolf (2016) and coeditor of Anthropocene Reading: Literary History in Geologic Times (2017).
Teresa Shewry is assistant professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is a coeditor of Environmental Criticism for the Twenty-First Century.
Aaron Rosenberg is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at King’s College London. His current book project is “Scale, Modernity, and the Novel: From Realism to the Genres of Deep Time.”
Benjamin Morgan is Associate Professor of English Language at the University of Chicago. He is the author of The Outward Mind: Materialist Aesthetics in Victorian Science and Literature (2017).
Elizabeth Carolyn Miller is Professor of English at the University of California, Davis.
Deanna K. Kreisel is an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia.
Adam Grener is Lecturer in English at Victoria University of Wellington. His current book project is “Improbable Realism: Chance, the Rise of Statistics, and the Nineteenth- Century British Novel.”
Sukanya Banerjee is Associate Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and author of Becoming Imperial Citizens: Indians in the Late-Victorian Empire.
Aims McGuinness is Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and author of Path of Empire: Panama and the California Gold Rush, 1848–1856.
Steven C. McKay is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California at Santa Cruz and author of Satanic Mills or Silicon Islands? The Politics of High-Tech Production in the Philippines.
Monique Allewaert is assistant professor of English at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.