I am currently completing my Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis. I have been based in Paris since 2023, where I am a visiting researcher at the Sorbonne Nouvelle. In my dissertation, “Amies des Livres”: Modernist Networks, Gender, and Translation in Literary Paris, I argue that women translators and cultural mediators were the dominant force in creating a transnational modernist literary culture in interwar Paris. With translation at the center of analysis instead of the margins, previously invisible women translators become visible as co-creators of meaning and essential collaborators in a network of cultural exchange. My project reimagines translatability not as an intrinsic quality of a text, but as contingent on the context of gender and power in publishing. This research has been supported by fellowships from the Harry Ransom Center and the Chateaubriand Fellowship Program, and an article drawn from my chapter on Dorothy Bussy that analyzes her autobiographical work Olivia as a born-translated novel recently appeared in Feminist Modernist Studies. My research and teaching specializations include twentieth-century Anglophone literature, transnational modernisms, feminist criticism, translation studies, and archival theory and practice.