Part-Time Faculty

Lauren  Auger

Lauren Auger

Assistant Professor

Research Interests / Specializations: Lauren's research interests are women, gender, sexuality, love, and war. She is particularly interested in the ways in which social understandings of gender and sexuality impact women’s involvement in war and public perceptions of women’s roles in wartime. She is also interested in how discourses regarding gender and sexuality influence how women remember their war service and how women see themselves as veterans.
Teaching: GSWS 2160A, 2162B, 2275F, 2220E, 2283G
Biography: Dr. Lauren Beth Auger is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies. Her PhD project ‘That’s My Story.’ Unpacking Canadian War Bride Veterans’ Life Histories (2017) completed at the University of Brighton in Brighton, United Kingdom focused on women who served in the British women’s military auxiliaries during the Second World War who came to Canada as war brides. Lauren is an oral historian and had the privilege of interviewing eighteen war bride veterans for her doctoral work. She teaches courses focused on the following topics: gender, sexuality, desire, intimate relations, embodiment, body image, feminist ways of knowing, and feminist research approaches.
Anmol Dutta

Anmol Dutta

Instructor

Research Interests / Specializations: Cultural Studies; Media Studies; Postcolonial Theory; Feminist Theory; Pop Culture; South Asian Film and Media
Teaching: GSWS 2168B Black Pop Culture: From Dubois to Black Panther
Biography: Biography: Anmol (she/her) is an ABD Ph.D. Candidate in English Studies at ÉîÒ¹¸£ÀûÕ¾. A former Shastri Fellow, her doctoral research focuses on the transnational implications of Netflix India’s dialogue between cultural representation, religion, and gender in contemporary India. As Senior Editor at Re:Locations, University of Toronto’s peer-reviewed graduate journal, she is co-recipient of the 2021-22 and 2022-23 Asian Institute’s Richard Charles Lee Leadership Award. Her work has been most recently published with the Association of Internet Researchers (2021) and Palgrave’s Streaming and Screen Culture in Asia-Pacific (2022).
Nikki Edwards

Nikki Edwards

Instructor

Teaching: GSWS 2161B Women and Popular Culture, GSWS 2163A Sex Education
Jacob Evoy

Jacob Evoy

Instructor

Research Interests / Specializations: Queer theory, queer history, Holocaust and genocide studies, intergenerational trauma, history of the AIDS epidemic, pop culture.
Teaching: GSWS 1023G, 2164A, 3163G
Biography: Jacob (they/them/their) is a Ph.D. candidate completing a collaborative degree in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies as well as Transitional Justice and Post-Conflict Reconstruction.. Jacob's dissertation is an examination of non-normative sexualities and intergenerational trauma. Their dissertation is entitled: "Queer(ing) Post-Holocaust Experiences: An Oral History of LGBTQ+ Children of Holocaust Survivors."
Jeremy  Johnston

Jeremy Johnston

Instructor

Research Interests / Specializations: Critical Theory and Cultural Studies; Adolescence, Citizenship, and Neoliberalism; Mental Health and Disability Studies; Feminist Theory; Youth Studies; Gender, Race, Class, and Young Adult Literature.
Teaching: GSWS 2243F, 2264G
Biography: Jeremy (he/him) recently completed his PhD in the Department of English & Writing Studies at ÉîÒ¹¸£ÀûÕ¾. His dissertation examines how contemporary YA novels detail instances of adolescent mental distress in gendered ways, ushering adolescents towards a model of young adulthood he terms productive citizenship.
Amy  Keating

Amy Keating

Instructor

Research Interests / Specializations: Queer theory, queer temporality, community, queer art and aesthetics, affect theory, phenomenology, performance
Teaching: GSWS 2167B Queer Pop Culture
Biography: Amy is a PhD Candidate in the GSWS department. Their research explores how queer art and aesthetics can foster communities of queer joy and belonging
Christian Ylagan

Christian Ylagan

Instructor

Teaching: GSWS 2205G
Biography: Christian Ylagan is a PhD candidate in Comparative Literature at ÉîÒ¹¸£ÀûÕ¾ in London, Ontario, Canada. His research looks at representations of queerness as monstrosity in Filipino literature and film in the aftermath of the country’s postcolonial experience. He has previously taught courses for GSWS, the Comparative Literature program, and English and Film Studies on topics such as postcolonial queer literature, critical masculinity studies, and the Disney Dream Factory. He currently serves as the Vice President of the Northeast MLA Graduate Student Caucus.
Katrina Younes

Katrina Younes

Instructor

Research Interests / Specializations: Katrina has published articles and book chapters on law, ecology, gender, and noir. Her most recent publication is a chapter on "Dark Waters: Eco-Noir in New York 2140" in The Crossroads of Crime Writing: Unseen Structures and Uncertain Spaces (Anthem Press). Her current research involves an analysis of deepfake AI and sexual assault and cross-cultural eco-noir.
Biography: Katrina Younes holds a Juris Doctor degree from ÉîÒ¹¸£ÀûÕ¾ Law and a PhD in English studies. She teaches courses on law, #MeToo and rape culture, Afrofuturism, and hip-hop feminism.