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  • Isaac Joslin

    Isaac Joslin holds a PhD from the University of Minnesota and is assistant professor of francophone studies at Arizona State University. His research in postcolonial francophone African literatures and cinemas, ecocriticism, and Afrofuturism has been published in numerous academic journals, and his first monograph, Afrofuturisms: Ecology, Humanity, and Francophone Cultural Expressions (2023), was published by Ohio University Press.



  • Fady Joudah

    Fady Joudah’s fourth poetry collection, Footnotes in the Order of Disappearance, is forthcoming from Milkweed Editions in the winter of 2018. His poetry and translations have been awarded the Yale Younger Poets Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Griffin Poetry Prize, among others.



  • Diaa Jubaili

    Diaa Jubaili (b. 1977, Basra, Iraq) is the author of eight novels and three short-story collections, including What Will We Do Without Calvino?, winner of the Tayeb Salih International Award for Creative Writing, and No Windmills in Basra. He was a contributor to the short-story collection Iraq +100 and has written for the Guardian.



  • Raushan Jumaniyazova

    Raushan Jumaniyazova is a musicologist and art manager who writes for television and radio. Her research interests include the traditional musical culture of Kazakhstan and Central Asia, contemporary music, and cultural management. She was a 2019 Fulbright Scholar (ucsc).



  • Ha-yun Jung

    Ha-yun Jung’s writing has appeared in Harvard Review, Best New American Voices, and other publications. Her translations include fiction by Oh Jung-hee, Kim Hoon, and Shin Kyung-sook, and Wallace Stevens’s poetry collection Harmonium, the first of his books to be made available in Korean. She is currently translating The Ninth Wave, a novel by Choi Eun-mi.



  • Jung Yong-jun

    Korean author Jung Yong-jun began his literary career with the short story “Good Night, Oblo” (굿나잇, 오블로), for which he received the 2009 Hyundai Literature Prize for New Writers. A Walk along Seoulleung, a collection of short stories, is considered a new turning point in Jung’s world of art. His short story “Disappearing Things,” contained therein, won the Moonji Literary Award in 2019.