• Golden Owens, a black woman with waist-long hair, stands with arms crossed, smiling in front of a black, white, and yellow mural.  Prof Owens wears a teal tank top and blue pants with a watch and hoop earrings.

    Faculty Profile: Dr. Golden Owens, Cinema & Media Studies

    Prof Golden Owens, the newest faculty member in the Cinema & Media Studies department, joins HAS for an interview about their undergrad and graduate student experiences.

  • Professor Turnovsky

    Faculty Profile: Prof. Geoffrey Turnovsky, French & Italian Studies

    Professor Geoffrey Turnovsky (French and Italian Studies) discusses the value of the Digital Humanities with English professor Anna Preus.

  • Diana Ruiz

    Faculty Profile: Prof. Diana Ruiz, Cinema & Media Studies

    Professor Diana Flores Ruíz comes to us from the University of California at Berkeley, where she earned her PhD in film and media studies.  Her current book project explores the visual technologies (from cartography to biometrics) that have been used to draw and redraw the US-Mexican border, how they work to maintain settler colonial power relations, and how Latinx artists and activities have enacted visual forms of resistance.

     

  • triplett and laporte

    Faculty Profile: Professors Pimone Triplet & Charles LaPorte, English

    Pimone Triplett and Charles LaPorte discuss how the poetic form from Terrance Hayes' "The Golden Shovel" grew out of deeper history of race and gender in America to help us better contextualize the famous Gwendolyn Brooks poem, "We Real Cool."

     

  • Steve Groening

    Faculty Profile: Prof. Stephen Groening, Cinema & Media Studies

    You’re writing a book about television and philosophy. Where do they intersect? 

    The short answer is: “no television, no postmodern theory.” Television’s ability to instantaneously transmit images and sounds from distant places changed how we thought of reality and led to the rise of such concepts like simulation. Rather than rehearse debates about mass media and its influence, the book explores television as something that has ontological and epistemological implications that haven’t really been grappled with in the field.

     

  • Shawn Wong

    Faculty Profile: Professor Shawn Wong, English

    Professor Shawn Wong was featured in Sound Bite, a podcast network from The Daily of the UW.  You can listen to the "How Do I Get Your Job" segment featuring Professor Wong from autumn quarter 2020 here: Screenwriting with Shawn Wong (Americanese)