- Ann Fox. Professor of English at Davidson College, specializing in 20th- and 21st-century dramatic literature and disability studies. Click to read about Dr. Fox’s collaborative project, “Re/Presenting HIV/AIDS.”
- Jared Gardner. Professor of English at The Ohio State University, specializing in graphic medicine. Click to read Dr. Gardner’s article “Autography’s Biography, 1972-2007.”
- Gabriella Modan. Associate Professor of English and Linguistics at The Ohio State University, specializing in sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology. Click to read Dr. Modan’s co-authored article, “Engaging Death: Narrative and Constructed Dialogue in Advance Care Planning.”
- Michael Montoya. Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of California-Irvine, specializing in diabetes, medical anthropology, health disparities, and Chicano/Latino studies. Click to read Dr. Montoya’s article “Potential Futures for a Healthy City: Community, Knowledge, and Hope for the Sciences of Life.”
- James Phelan. Distinguished University Professor of English at The Ohio State University, specializing in narrative medicine. Click to read Dr. Phelan’s article “Local Fictionality within Global Nonfiction: Roz Chast’s Can’t We Talk about Something More Pleasant.”
- Margaret Price. Associate Professor of English at The Ohio State University, specializing in disability studies. Click to read Dr. Price’s article “The Bodymind Problem and the Possibilities of Pain.”
- Amy Shuman. Professor of English at The Ohio State University, specializing in disability studies and folklore.
- Noah Tamarkin. Assistant Professor of Comparative Studies, specializing in science and technology studies and ethnography. Click to read Dr. Tamarkin’s article “Genetic Diaspora: Producing Knowledge of Genes and Jews in Rural South Africa.”
- Sandra Tanenbaum. Professor of Health Services Management and Policy, specializing in disability policy. Click to read Dr. Tanenbaum’s article “Mental Health Consumer-Operated Services Organizations in the US: Citizenship as a Core Function and Strategy for Growth.”
- Christa Teston. Assistant Professor of English at The Ohio State University, specializing in rhetorical theory. Click to read Dr. Teston’s article “Rhetoric, Precarity, and mHealth Technologies.”