Ph.D. in English Literature, Texas A&M University, 2007
M.A. in English Literature, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, 1999
B.A. in English Literature, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, 1997
Dongshin Yi specializes in contemporary American fiction and gothic/SF literature. His main research interest is on posthumanism. He has published A Genealogy of Cyborgothic (Ashgate 2010) and contributed a section on Timothy Morton in The Frontier of 21st Century Thoughts (Yigam 2020). His recent articles include “Gulliver, Heidegger’s Man: Swift’s Satire of Man in Captivation” (College Literature 2018), “Broken Head: Artificial Intelligence and Ethics” (Journal of Artificial Intelligence Humanities 2018), “Things like Zombies: New Materialisms and Zombies” (In/Outside: English Studies in Korea 2017), and “Out of Zombie-to-Human Conflicts: The Limitation of Zombie Narrative and the Ethics of Infection” (The Journal of Literature and Film 2017). He is currently participating in a NRF-funded project entitled “From Hierarch to Entanglement: Human-Animal Relations in the Age of Posthumanism.”