Issues Under Tissues
by Lay Sion NG, PhD
by Lay Sion NG, PhD
Hi! I am Lay Sion Ng. I teach American Literature at Sophia University, Japan. My research focuses on Ernest Hemingway's work through the lens of environmental humanities, especially ecocriticism, posthumanism, and material feminism. My broader interests include gender and sexuality studies, symbolic cannibalism, etc.
Outside formal scholarship, I write freely—experimenting with form, working through ideas, capturing daily insights. This site features my academic reflections, free writing, and selected student work, published to motivate and celebrate thoughtful writing. Please check them out during your coffee break!
¡Estoy aprendiendo español desde julio de 2024!
Teaching American Literature at the English Literature Department at Sophia University since April 2025!
New academic article: "Silenced Bodies, Profitable Flesh" (October 2025)
My paper "Olfactory Trans-species Imagination in Hemingway's Works" was published as one of the chapters in Hemingway and Posthumanism (Edinburgh University Press) on 31 October 2025! Use code NEW30 at checkout to get a 30% discount!
My first monograph, entitled Hemingway, Ecology and Culture: Re-reading Hemingway in the Anthropocene (Bloomsbury Academic), was published on 16 October 2025!
My proposal for the ASLE Spotlight has been accepted! I will be part of an episode on the theme of "Multispecies Connections" in 2026 to discuss my book!
Invited to talk about my work on Hemingway and Ecology on the Hemingway Society-sponsored program "One True Podcast," organized by Mark Cirino, in 2026!
Academic CV (updated Sept. 2025)
Profile on ResearchMap (Sophia University)
Lay Sion NG, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of American Literature at Sophia University, Japan, where she specializes in environmental humanities and ecocritical approaches to twentieth-century American literature. She holds a Ph.D. from Osaka University's Graduate School of Language and Culture. Her research fundamentally reframes Ernest Hemingway's literary canon through feminist ecocritical and posthumanist lenses, challenging conventional masculinist interpretations and revealing previously underexamined ecological dimensions in canonical American fiction.
NG's monograph Hemingway, Ecology and Culture: Re-reading Hemingway in the Anthropocene was published by Bloomsbury Academic in October 2025 as part of the Environmental Cultures Series. This study employs a multidisciplinary framework—integrating material ecocriticism, eco-gothic theory, posthumanism, light/colour ecology, olfactory discourse, environmental history, and cultural ecology—to demonstrate how Hemingway's fiction functions as an "ecological force" that heightens awareness of nonhuman agency and interspecies relationships. The monograph challenges reductive interpretations of Hemingway as merely a hyper-masculine figure, offering instead nuanced readings of significant works, including The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Old Man and the Sea, and The Garden of Eden, alongside key short fiction such as "Big Two-Hearted River" and "The Snows of Kilimanjaro."
Her peer-reviewed scholarship has appeared in leading journals, including The Hemingway Review and ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment. Notable publications include articles examining ecological gothic elements in A Farewell to Arms, material feminist perspectives on Don DeLillo's Zero K, and the politics of cure in The Sun Also Rises. A chapter on olfactory trans-species imagination in Hemingway's works appears in Hemingway and Posthumanism, edited by Ryan Hediger and Marcos Norris (Edinburgh University Press, 2025). Dr. Ng's research represents a significant contribution to the ongoing reassessment of American modernist literature through environmental humanities methodologies, with particular relevance to contemporary Anthropocene scholarship.
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