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Contributors

Editors

Jeffrey C. Kessler is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Illinois Chicago. His research and teaching interrogate the intersections of writing, fiction, and critical university studies. He has published about the works of Oscar Wilde, Henry James, Vernon Lee, and Walter Pater. He earned his PhD from Indiana University.

Mark Bennett has served as director of the University of Illinois Chicago’s (UIC) First-Year Writing Program since 2012. He earned his PhD in English from UIC in 2013. His primary research interests are in composition studies and rhetoric, with a focus on writing program administration, course placement, outcomes assessment, international student education, and AI writing.

Sarah Primeau serves as the associate director of the First-Year Writing Program and teaches first-year writing classes at University of Illinois Chicago. Sarah has presented her work at the Conference on College Composition and Communication, the Council of Writing Program Administrators Conference, and the Cultural Rhetorics Conference. She holds a PhD in Rhetoric and Composition from Wayne State University, where she focused on composition pedagogy, cultural rhetorics, writing assessment, and writing program administration.

Authors

Jeffrey C. Kessler is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Illinois Chicago. His research and teaching interrogate the intersections of writing, fiction, and critical university studies. He has published about the works of Oscar Wilde, Henry James, Vernon Lee, and Walter Pater. He earned his PhD from Indiana University.

Charitianne Williams is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Illinois Chicago focused on teaching first-year composition and writing center studies. When she’s not teaching or thinking about teaching, she’s thinking about writing.

For more than twenty years, Virginia Costello has been teaching a variety of English composition, literature, and gender studies courses. She received her Ph.D. from Stony Brook University in 2010 and is presently Senior Lecturer in the Department of English at University of Illinois Chicago. Early in her career, she studied anarcho-catholicism through the work of Dorothy Day and The Catholic Worker Movement. She completed research at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam and has published articles on T.S. Eliot, Emma Goldman, and Bernard Shaw. More recently, she presented her work at the Modern Studies Association conference (Portland, OR, 2022), Conference on College Composition and Communication (Chicago, Il, 2023) and Comparative and Continental Philosophy Circle (Tallinn, Estonia, 2022 and Bogotá, Columbia, 2023). Her research interests include prison reform/abolition, archē in anarchism, and Zen Buddhism.

Annie Armstrong has been a reference and instruction librarian at the Richard J. Daley Library at the University of Illinois Chicago since 2000 and has served as the Coordinator of Teaching & Learning Services since 2007. She serves as the library’s liaison to the College of Education and the Department of Psychology. Her research focuses on enhancing and streamlining the research experience of academic library users through in-person and online information literacy instruction.

Contributors

Mark Schoenknecht (Research Assistant) was born and raised in Michigan. He earned a B.A. from Michigan State University and an M.A. from the University of Massachusetts—Boston before pursuing a Ph.D. in English Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), where he’s currently completing a dissertation on the intersections of literacy, social mobility, and economic inequality in the postindustrial Midwest. As a doctoral student at UIC, Mark has been the recipient of numerous accolades, including a Provost’s Graduate Research Award, the English Department’s Distinguished Graduate Teaching Award, and a Fulbright U.S. Student grant.

Jennifer Torres (Research Assistant) is a second-year doctoral student in rhetoric and composition studies at the University of Illinois Chicago. Her research explores the rhetorical tradition and primarily focuses on aporia in Plato’s dialogues. She’s particularly interested in identifying motivating factors for assigning argumentative writing in first-year writing courses.

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Writing for Inquiry and Research Copyright © 2023 by Jeffrey Kessler, Mark Bennett, and Sarah Primeau is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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