Marie Carrière is the Director of the Canadian Literature Centre/Centre de littérature canadienne and teaches French, English, and Comparative Literature at the University of Alberta. Her research focuses on contemporary women's writing and the theory and history of feminism.
Ursula Mathis-Moser est professeure émérite au Département de langues romanes et directrice du Centre d'études canadiennes À l'Université d'Innsbruck.
Kit Dobson is Professor of English at Mount Royal University. He teaches and publishes in the areas of Canadian literature, film, and globalization studies.
Born in Montréal, 1943. Poet, novelist and essayist, twice Governor General winner for her poetry, Nicole Brossard has published more than forty books since 1965. Most of them have been translated into English and many other languages. In 2018, she received the first Violet Prize by the Blue Metropolis Festival. As well, she received The Griffin Prize 2019 for a Life Achievement. Her most recent book is Avant Desire: a Nicole Brossard Reader (Coach House Books).
Louise Dupré is the author of numerous books and was twice nominated for the Governor General's Award for Poetry. Her novel La memoria won two major literary prizes. La Voie lactee (The Milky Way), her most recent book, was nominated for the 2001 Prix France-Quebec. Louise Dupre teaches literature and creative writing at the Universite du Quebec a Montreal.
Louise Dupré is the author of numerous books and was twice nominated for the Governor General's Award for Poetry. She teaches literature and creative writing at the Université du Québec à Montréal.
Margery Fee is a professor of English at the University of British Columbia, where she has taught Indigenous literature since 1996. Her most recent articles in that field appeared in Whatâs to Eat? Entrees in Canadian Foodways, edited by Nathalie Cooke, and Troubling Tricksters: Revisioning Critical Conversations , edited by Deanna Reder and Linda M. Morra. She co-authored the Guide to Canadian English Usage.
Smaro Kamboureli is Professor with the School of English and Theatre Studies, Canada Research Chair, and Director of TransCanada Institute, University of Guelph. Her award-winning work, Scandalous Bodies: Diasporic Literature in English Canada, was republished in 2009. She lives in Toronto.
Aaron Kreuter is a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Comparative Study in Literature, Art, and Culture at Carleton University. He is the author of Shifting Baseline Syndrome; You and Me, Belonging; and Arguments for Lawn Chairs.
Daniel Laforest is Associate Professor at the University of Alberta where he teaches Quebec and Canadian literatures, as well as French literature, cultural studies and critical theory. He has been Fulbright fellow at the Centre for Cultural Studies of the University of California Santa Cruz. He serves as associate editor for the academic journal Canadian Literature.
Heather Milne is an associate professor at the University of Winnipeg. She is the author of Poetry Matters: Neoliberalism, Affect, and the Posthuman in Twenty-First Century North American Feminist Poetics (2018) and co-editor of Prismatic Publics, Innovative Canadian Women's Poetry and Poetics (2009).
Maïté Snauwaert holds a PhD in French Literature from Université Paris 8. In Canada since 2004, she has been a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre de recherche sur le texte et l'imaginaire Figura at the Université du Québec À Montréal, at the CRILCQ/Université de Montréal, and at McGill University (Marie-Thérèse Reverchon scholarship). She is an associate professor at the Campus Saint-Jean, University of Alberta.