Emmeline Clein is a writer and cultural critic whose work explores the intersection of gender, technology, and embodiment. Her debut book, "Dead Weight: Essays on Hunger and Harm," examines eating disorders, internet culture, and the forces that shape young women's relationships with their bodies. Clein's essays and criticism have appeared in The Cut, The Nation, The New Republic, and other publications. Based in Brooklyn, she brings a sharp analytical lens to contemporary feminism and digital life, combining personal narrative with cultural criticism to interrogate how desire, control, and self-destruction manifest in modern womanhood.