SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
Candida Rifkind is Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Winnipeg. She specializes in alternative comics, life writing, and Canadian literature and culture. Her books include Comrades and Critics: Women, Literature, and the Left in 1930s Canada (UTP, 2009) and the co-edited volume Canadian Graphic: Picturing Life Narratives (WLUP, 2016). She contributed chapters to Material Cultures in Canada and Canadian Literature and Cultural Memory, and has published in Biography, English Studies in Canada, International Journal of Comic Art, Journal of Canadian Studies, and Canadian Review of American Studies. For more on her current project go to www.projectgraphicbio.com.
Cynthia Franklin is Professor of English at the University of Hawai‘i and co-edits Biography. She is the author of Academic Lives: Memoir, Cultural Theory and the University Today (2009) and Writing Women's Communities: The Politics and Poetics of Contemporary Multi-Genre Anthologies (1997). Essays and review articles appear or are forthcoming in journals including American Quarterly, Cultural Critique, GLQ, Life Writing, LIT, and The Contemporary Pacific. She has collaborated with Laura Lyons on articles, interviews, and a special issue of Biography, “Personal Effects: The Testimonial Uses of Life Writing.” She also co-edited the 2014 special Biography issue “Life in Occupied Palestine.”
Sophia Brown is a fourth-year PhD candidate and Assistant Lecturer in the School of English at the University of Kent, supervised by Caroline Rooney and Bashir Abu-Manneh. My thesis is an exploration of contemporary Palestinian life writing, focusing specifically on issues of exile and diaspora. As well as conventional autobiographies and memoirs, my thesis also considers the growing number of anthologies published about Palestinian experience, examining their contribution to the field of life writing, and the narration of displacement from a Palestinian perspective.
Helga Lénárt-Cheng grew up in Hungary, and studied French and German at JATE (Szeged) and ELTE (Budapest). She completed her PhD in Comparative Literature at Harvard University in 2007. Her dissertation explored various autobiographical traditions, with a special focus on the communal role of personal stories. Since 2008 she has been on the faculty of the Department of Modern Languages at Saint Mary’s College of California (in the Bay Area). Her main areas of research include all genres of life-writing (including blogs, diaries, and video narratives), theories of subjectivity and community, phenomenological hermeneutics, and Eastern European autobiographies. Lenart-Cheng has published articles in New Literary Studies, Biography, Cultural Politics, Hungarian Cultural Studies, American Studies/Amerikastudien, Auto/Biography, etc. Her co-authored monograph on the exiled writer Alexander Lenard is forthcoming in February 2016 from L’Harmattan, Budapest. Her next book project focuses on “Life Stories, Communities and the Ethos of Sharing."
Katrin Den Elzen holds an MPhil and currently undertakes a PhD in Creative Writing at Curtin University, Australia, which entails a creative component and an accompanying exegesis. She is writing a grief memoir about the loss of her husband and the rebuilding of her life and identity. Her exegesis investigates how memoirists textually negotiate the experience of young widowhood, and specifically, how they rebuild the fragmented self in the text. Katrin presented a paper at the IABA Europe and the IABA Pacific conferences in 2015. As a widow, Katrin became a spokesperson for palliative care in order to contribute to social and institutional change.
Ümit Kennedy is a PhD candidate at the Writing and Society Research Centre at Western Sydney University. Her research explores video blogging (vlogging) on YouTube as a contemporary form of Life Writing. Focusing on Australian mummy vloggers, Ümit examines how mothers construct their identity on YouTube in dialogue with their viewers. Ümit has experience teaching undergraduate courses in writing at both Western Sydney University and the University of Notre Dame.