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Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Literature, University of Birmingham

My research straddles twentieth and twenty-first century Anglophone literatures. I am particularly interested in the relation of literature and literary studies to wider culture. Research interests include digital cultures, life writing, book and media history (including reading communities), transnational modernism and its legacies, the institutionalisation of literary studies, literary and interdisciplinary methodologies, cultural studies.

My first book, Literature and the Rise of the Interview examines the rise of the interview in literary culture and was published by OUP in 2018.

My second research project examines the intersection between literature and computing since WW2 and is organised into two books. The first "Programming Literature", traces the ways in which writers have used and thought with computing historically. The second "Machine Talk" is an intellectual history of how conversation became a key metaphor and model for understanding world literature and computing (a back history of ChatGPT if I am being glib).

This cultural and technological background has led to my role as a PI on the Stuart Hall Archive Project (2023-26) where I will be leading the "Dialogues" strand - designing digital infrastructures to make Stuart Hall's archival papers accessible which respond to his intellectual legacies.

I also write about contemporary literary cultures: I am working on a book entitled The Social Life of Literature and the co-written digital publication, Ego Media, was published with Stanford UP Digital in 2023.

Internally, I am a member of the Humanities & Social Sciences Ethical Review Board, with a particular interest in digital research ethics. Externally, I am on the editorial board of the European Journal of Life Writing and also edit the Modern Section of the Year's Work in English Studies.