Alex Wolff (She/They) holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University California, Irvine. Her research explores how queer and trans folk in South Korea create life and politics vis-à-vis contemporary economic transformations, demographic change, and shifting norms around heterosexual adulthood. It builds upon twenty months of ethnographic fieldwork conducted for her dissertation, Queer Precarities: Economies of Adulthood and LGBTQ+ Politics in South Korea. Wolff's work has been published in the Routledge Companion to Media Anthropology and a forthcoming piece on pronatalism and queer social reproduction in Korea will be published in the journal Sexualities. Her work has been supported by the Social Science Research Council and The Korea Foundation, among others. With a teaching philosophy that builds on the ethics of her research experiences, Wolff works to make classes that are collaborative and inclusive across difference. She will teach a course entitled "Queer Asias" for GNSS in the fall, and courses on gender, sexuality, and politics for ANTH in the spring.