Jason Camlot (host and producer) brings extensive experience in the development and management of interdisciplinary, collaborative research teams, expertise in literary sound recordings, and has developed digital artifacts including a sound archive, digital poetry installations, and mobile media apps. He will guide the vision of the program, foster productive working relationships among network participants, help shape and articulate the goals of projects as they are pursued by working groups, facilitate collaboration across institutions, disciplines and communities, advocate for the project in all contexts, and ensure productive and rewarding experiences for students and emerging scholars.
Katherine McLeod (host and producer) researches archives, performance, and poetry. She has co-edited the collection CanLit Across Media: Unarchiving the Literary Event (with Jason Camlot, McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2019). She is writing a monograph (under contract with Wilfrid Laurier University Press) that is a feminist listening to recordings of women poets reading on CBC Radio. She is an affiliated researcher with SpokenWeb and she is the 2020-2021 Researcher-in-Residence at the Concordia University Library.
Emily Stuchberry (supervising producer) holds a BA in Cultural Studies from McGill University and spent several years working in communications before returning to school to pursue graduate studies. Currently, she is an MA student in English Literature at Concordia University where she researches whimsy as a literary affect in contemporary and Victorian literature. In addition to pursuing her MA, she is also a playwright, free lance stage manager, and avid podcast listener.
Thomas “TJ” MacPherson (sound designer) received his MA in English at Rutgers University in New Jersey. He is currently enrolled in the English PhD program at Concordia University. His main research interest is in media archeology. Most of his projects such as trying to 3D print a replica of a typewriter from 1910 or creating a podcast and website about celebrating material collections start with the question “what makes this thing so cool?” In his free time he can be found trying to buy fountain pens he will never write with, instruments he can’t play, or cameras he will never shoot with.
Lou Raskin (sound designer) is an artist interested in space and sound. His MA research-creation thesis (2021) focused on the connection between these concepts within soundscape ecology and its manifold field recording methods. For nearly a decade Lou has worked as a sound designer, editor, composer, and archivist. While scoring films and mixing for many audio formats, Lou’s musical moniker Man Happens released a debut album in 2025. He is also one of the guitarists and creative forces behind Museums. Beyond recording, Lou’s workshops on ecological listening have been graciously supported through organizations such as Paysages studio, MusiqueNature, and Audiotopie. Lou’s installation work and workshops have been featured in programming for Verdun 150, Festival Akousma and Festival Grenache.
Yara Ajeeb (transcriber) is a Montréal-based writer and artist. With a background in English literature and French studies from Concordia University, she thrives on creative expression and exploration. Born and raised in Syria, Yara enjoys incorporating her culture into everything she does. She is driven by curiosity and a love for storytelling.