Matthew Wolf-Meyer

He served as an assistant professor of anthropology at Wayne State University in 2007–2008, an assistant and associate professor of anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, from 2008 to 2015, and is currently an associate professor of anthropology at Binghamton University.

The first is called The Slumbering Masses: Sleep, Medicine and Modern American Life which was published in 2012, and received the Society for Medical Anthropology's New Millennium Book Award in 203.

His second book, Theory for the World to Come: Speculative Fiction and Apocalyptic Anthropology, was published in 2019, and his most recent book, Unraveling: Remaking Personhood in a Neurodiverse Age was published in 2020.

His work draws on poststructuralist and affect theory—particularly the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari—to develop frameworks to conceptualize human variation in ways that move beyond typical understandings of disability, impairment, and medicalization.

He is most associated with anti-reductive approaches to race and disability, represented in his work on the biology of everyday life and affective bioethics.