| Skip Links | Access/General | Site Map | |||||
Faculty of Arts and Social SciencesLancaster University |
|
||||
| You are here: Home > | |||||
Staff MenuSearch for ACADEMIC staff: |
Dr Jonathan Munby
Senior Lecturer in Film Studies and American Studies Department: Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts Degree: PhD in American Studies, University of Minnesota Associated research centres and groups: Film Current TeachingI currently teach in the following areas: Undergraduate:
Postgraduate:
Research InterestsHis research interests are:
Current research project: Currently completing research for a biography of the African American writer, actor, and political activist, Julian Mayfield (1928-1984)--provisional title: "Which Way Does the Blood Red River Run: Julian Mayfield and the Politics of Oblivion". This project has been supported by a Sheila Biddle Ford Foundation Fellowship at the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, Harvard University. Details of this project can be found on my Harvard University webpage: http://dubois.fas.harvard.edu/jonathan-munby The project potentially involves editing a companion anthology of Julian Mayfield's writing--his critical journalism, academic essays and his out-of-print and unpublished fiction and plays. Publications include: Books (single-authored monographs): Under a Bad Sign: Criminal Self-Representation in African-American Popular Culture (University of Chicago Press, 2011), 224 pp http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/U/bo11396510.html Public Enemies, Public Heroes: Screening the Gangster from Little Caesar to Touch of Evil (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), 263 pp Most recent journal articles and chapter contributions Articles: "Signifyin' Cinema: Rudy Ray Moore and the Quality of Badness", Journal for Cultural Research Vol.11, No.3 (July 2007): 203-219 Chapters in anthologies: "Baad Cinema: The Gangsta/ Gangster Connection in African American Cinema," in Public Enemies: Film zwischen Idenititaetsbildung und Kontrolle ed. Winfried Pauleit, Christine Rueffert, und Karl-Heinz Schmid (Berlin: Bertz-Fischer, 2011), 37-50 http://www.bertz-fischer.de/product_info.php?products_id=345 "Gangs and Mobs", in A Companion to Crime Fiction, ed.Charles J. Rzepka and Lee Horsley (Oxford: Blackwell, 2010), 210-221 "From Gangsta to Gangster: The Hood Film's Criminal Allegiance with Hollywood", in The New Film History: Sources,Methods,Approaches,ed.James Chapman, Mark Glancy, and Sue Harper (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 166-179 "The Underworld Films of Oscar Micheaux and Ralph Cooper: Towards a Genealogy of the Black Screen Gangster", inMob Culture: Essays in the American Gangster Film, ed. Lee Grieveson, Esther Sonnet, and Peter Stanfield(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2005), 261-280 "The 'No' to the Great American 'Yes': Hollywood's Criminal Representation of Organised Crime, 1929-1951", in Crime and Hollywood Incorporated, ed. Françoise Clary and John Dean(Rouen, France: Publications de l'Université de Rouen, 2003), 179-202 "How it Feels" (co-authored) in Crash Cultures: Modernity, Mediation and the Material, ed. Jane Arthurs and Iain Grant(Bristol: Intellect Books, 2003) Potential Doctoral ProposalsAmerican Film (especially in the history and theory of Hollywood cinema) African American Culture and History (especially the relationship between popular culture and race) Censorship and Mass Media European Exiles and Hollywood American Popular Culture/ Theories of Popular Culture Career details
Associated Keywords: Aesthetics, America, American literature, American studies, Cinema, Contemporary popular culture, Crime fiction, Crime films, Critical theory, Cultural Studies, Cultural theory, Culture, Culture and media, Detective fiction, Diaspora, Early cinema, Ethnicity, Fiction, Film, Film noir, Film studies, Film theory, Gramsci, Hollywood cinema, Identity politics, Interdisciplinary, Literary and cultural theory, Literary criticism, Literary theory, Literature, Marxian analysis, Media, Modernism, Modernity, Multiculturalism, Organised crime, Outlaws, Popular culture, Race, Racialisation, Representations of masculinity in fiction and film, Twentieth-century popular culture, United States, U.S. history, Visual culture, Walter Benjamin, Westerns
|
Contact DetailsTel: +44 (0)1524 594615 Room: County Main, B160 |
|||
| | Home | Departments | People | Study Here | Research | Business and Enterprise | News and Events | - FASS Intranet - |
|||||
| Save this page:
|
|||||
|
|||||