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Devani Singh is Assistant Professor in English at the University of Geneva, where she leads the Caroline Spurgeon FNS project and specialises in medieval and early modern English literature and book history. She is the author of Chaucer's Early Modern Readers: Reception in Print and Manuscript (Cambridge UP, 2023) and, with Lukas Erne, co-author of Shakespeare in Geneva (Ithaque, 2018), and co-editor of Bel-vedére, or the Garden of the Muses: An Early Modern Printed Commonplace Book (Cambridge UP, 2020). Her publications also include essays in the Chaucer Review, the Journal of the Early Book Society, Digital Philology, Shakespeare Jahrbuch, and the Review of English Studies. |
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Elina Leblanc is a digital humanist, specialised in digital libraries, digital scholarly editions, and user interface and engagement. She has participated in various digital humanities projects, including Fonte Gaia, Untangling the cordel or SETAF. For this FNS project, she is in charge of the digital analysis of Chaucer’s allusions, collected by Caroline Spurgeon, from the data processing to their online publication through an open-source database.
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Jordan Skinner is a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Chaucer Studies at the University of Geneva. He earned his doctoral degree in the Department of English at Princeton University. His research focuses on medieval poetry and is informed by his interests in linguistics, legal history, and philosophy. His dissertation, Medieval Curfew: Poetic Space and the Governance of Time, reconsiders the relationship between law and literature by examining how medieval nocturnal restrictions shaped urban policing, forbidden pleasure, and the construction of the working day. |

