Georgia Ntola holds a PhD in English Literature and Culture from the Department of English Language and Literature, at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. She holds a BA (cum laude) and a MA in English and American Studies (cum laude) from the same institution. Her doctoral dissertation examines the representation of feminist solidarity in 21st-century neo-Victorian texts. Her research interests revolve around (neo-)Victorian literature, the Gothic, trauma, and feminist theory. In 2024, her paper on the establishment of transnational feminist solidarity in Park Chan-wook's neo-Victorian film The Handmaiden (2016) won MESEA's (The Society for Multi-Ethnic Studies: Europe and the Americas) Young Scholar Excellence Award for its contribution to the field of multi-ethnic studies (published in Atlantic Studies). In 2025, Dr. Ntola received the 'Jina Politi' award (awarded by the Department of English Language and Literature, AUTh), which covered her conference and travel expenses to Wolverhampton, UK. She has given talks in international academic conferences at home and abroad, and her recent work has been published in the journals Victoriographies, Atlantic Studies, and Neo-Victorian Studies.