Welcome new QRT editor, Jay David Miller

Announcing a new editor of Quaker Religious Thought: Jay David Miller! Jay recently moved from his role as associate editor into the editor’s chair. The next issue, #145, will be Jay’s first issue as editor. He will introduce himself more fully in the editorial introduction to that issue, so if you are not already subscribed to QRT (or, *ahem*, if your subscription has lapsed), here is a friendly reminder to visit our subscription page so you’ll receive your very own copy.

Jay David Miller is an assistant professor of English and an associate director of the George Fox University Honors Program. His broad fields of research encompass the literatures of colonial North America and the Atlantic world, the early American republic, and the antebellum United States, with a focus on Quaker writing and theology. His first book, Quaker Jeremiad, is under contract with The Pennsylvania State University Press. He is a coeditor of a forthcoming special issue of Early American Literature, “New Directions in Quaker Literary History.” His articles have appeared in Religion and LiteratureEarly American LiteratureQuaker Studies, and The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. He is the author of the entry on John Woolman in Oxford Bibliographies Online: American Literature. 

We also wish to extend our heartfelt gratitude to Jeffrey Dudiak for serving as the editor of Quaker Religious Thought for Issues #140–143. From all of us leading and reading QRT, thank you, Jeffrey, for your careful and care-filled approach to the editorial role. We appreciate your ability to encourage the individual voices of those whose articles appeared in these issues, collaborating with the Quaker Theological Discussion Group, and drawing on your own academic expertise to ensure quality publications that will benefit the scholarly community and the Quaker world. Jeffrey will continue serving QRT on the Advisory Council.

See the current list of QRT leaders here.

Welcome new QRT editor, Jay David Miller