Richard E. Miller is a Professor of English at Rutgers University where he has been teaching since 1993. Richard has written a number of scholarly books, the most recent being, On the End of Privacy (2019). He has tried his hand at blogging, poetry, graphic narrative, and photography, and is currently working on a book of creative nonfiction entitled, To Become a Writer. In 2022, Richard received the Chancellor-Provosts Award for Excellence in Teaching which honors a member of the New Brunswick faculty whose teaching contributions resulted in an extraordinary impact on the institution, students’ experiences, and public engagement.
Ann Jurecic is an Associate Professor of English at Rutgers University where she teaches the history of the essay, women writers, and the medical humanities. Ann taught in a public high school, a community college, and the Princeton Writing Program before she joined the Department of English at Rutgers University-New Brunswick in 2005. Ann’s first book, Illness as Narrative (2012), charts the emergence of personal writing about illness in the twentieth century. Her new book, Changing Minds: Women and the Political Essay, 1960–2000, is about the careers of five innovative writers, among them Rachel Carson and Joan Didion (2023).