Jean Dangler is Professor of Spanish at Tulane University. Her research interests include the history of medicine and the body, and the global Middle Ages. She is the author of Mediating Fictions: Literature, Women Healers, and the Go-Between in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia (Bucknell UP, 2001), Making Difference in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia (U of Notre Dame P, 2005), and Edging toward Iberia (U of Toronto P, 2017). Edging toward Iberia offers new ways to imagine nonmodern Iberian history and literature through the principles of network theory and World-Systems Analysis. Her latest book project, Reading Jaume Roig’s Espill, examines readers’ annotations in many of the Espill’s (The Mirror’s) sixteenth-century printed copies, arguing that readers interpreted the Espill’s misogyny as harmonizing with the book’s religious message and materials. Dangler’s book sheds light on the Espill’s relationship to Isabel de Villena’s proto-feminist Vita Christi, which challenged the antifeminist Espill and championed earthly women.