People Directory
Adam Cook is a film critic, curator, and scholar. Outside of the academy, his experience as a writer and film programmer spans over a decade. Within the academy, Cook’s research seeks to find connective tissue between reductive strands of theory and a revitalized aesthetics centred on formalism.
I am a Mexican-Canadian filmmaker, screenwriter, and videographer, born in San Luis Potosi, Mexico. I hold a Master’s degree in Film Production from York University where I developed my thesis project Hidden Gods. Besides fiction films I produced documentaries (Making Sones and Memories) and have been editor of some documentary projects. My most recent collaboration work Women Building Peace in Africa was awarded best documentary at the Silverwave Film Festival 2016. I also edited episodes of the TV series Battle Scars, about Canadian Military in times of peace and war.
Ahmed is an award-winning filmmaker, film scholar, and film programmer. His career spans over 19 years where he has made numerous shorts and features that played myriad international film festivals and picked several prestigious awards. Nour’s area of expertise comprises screenwriting, producing, video-editing, and directing. His work varies between experimental, documentary, and fiction films. However, his particular interest is in hybrid nonfiction filmmaking.
Alex Jansen is a creative entrepreneur with more than 20 years’ experience in the film & media industry and a passion for community development.
Jansen has spent more than a decade running his own successful multimedia production company, Pop Sandbox. He has produced award-winning films, video games, graphic novels and interactive experiences, featured at the Cannes Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, SXSW, the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), Hot Docs, the Tokyo Game Show, Indiecade and PAX East among others. Visit:
Ali Dixon (she/her) is a Canadian award-winning interdisciplinary artist, filmmaker, and published writer based in Katarowki, Kingston, Ontario. She is a graduate of Queen’s University (Katarowki, Kingston, Ontario) where she obtained a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) degree in Film and Media Studies. In 2023, Ali obtained her MFA from NSCAD University in Halifax. She is currently in her first year of the SCCS PhD program.
Ali draws from such themes as the surreal, the occult, and the whimsical in her work. Her research interests include the intersections between feminist film theory, early cinema, and the Victorian Spiritualist movement as well as Victorian and early-twentieth century visual and material culture, animation, and costume design. Her current research conducted through the SCCS PhD program is focused on the spectacle of the body in the 19th to early 20th century, in particular exploring the question of how the performance of femininity was put display in Euro-Western visual and material culture of the era through such spectacles as early cinema and photography, vaudeville performance, spiritualist demonstrations, and collections of ephemeral objects. Of particular interest in this project is the ways in which innovations in media and communication technologies of the era contributed to this culture of objectification by defining and redefining notions of spectatorship, perception, ownership, and presence.
As a media scholar working at the intersections of race, queer, and feminist studies, my research focuses on how media performances define and defy conceptions of Asian/Asian diasporic bodies. Drawing on transnational cultural histories, I theorize resistance, complicity, and ambivalence in new border crossings facilitated by digital media. I am interested in the performance of media technologies. As such, my scholarship traverses the areas of digital media, popular culture, and media installation. My research seeks to establish a multidirectional relationship between medium and content. That is, I am interested how tangible technological objects and their processes, embodied practices around media technologies, and the content communicated through media work together. In the digital age, the ideas of media as immaterial, virtual, and transcendent dominate. My work pushes against this impulse by grounding the body, the material, and the haptic.
Alice Brisbin (she/her) is an MA student in the Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies program, previously graduating from ³ÉÈË´óƬ's Film and Media with a BAH. Her research interests include archival remediation, narrative and documentary filmmaking, and power structures in archival practices.
I am the Chief Curator/Curator of Canadian Historical Art at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. My curatorial approach involves resituating visual and material cultures through a feminist lens and innovations in interpretive display. Areas of research include women artists, artistic groups, regional scenes, collecting histories and intersections of art and craft.
Andrea Malus is a PhD candidate in Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies at Queen’s University. Born in former Czechoslovakia, she trained in puppet and traditional toy making at a vocational school before emigrating to Canada. She holds an Honours BA in Visual Arts and studied animation at Sheridan College. Her research explores allegory in communist-era Czechoslovak animation, the relationship between the body and the performing object, and the tactile nature of materials in stop-motion animation.
Anne Runciman is a PhD student in the Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies program at ³ÉÈË´óƬ. After finishing her BA in Political Studies, Anne went on to the Master’s program at Queen’s Film & Media where she studied drive-in movie theatres. As part of her Master’s thesis, she produced a podcast series, Let’s All Go to the Drive-In, which incorporated elements of archive media, sound effects and music to bring the listener into the world of the drive-in. Now in her PhD, Anne is studying museum exhibition design in dark tourism sites. She’s looking at how these grim tourist attractions use interior design, lighting, archive media, sound effects and music to shape the emotional experience of the visitor.
Anran Zheng is an MA student in the Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies program. After graduating with a Bachelor’s degree in Journalism and Communication in China, Anran turned her research interest to the intersection of film and gender, especially focusing on Chinese feminist and queer film. She is also interested in archival film and curatorial practice; gender and Asian pop/sub-culture.
Ariel is a PhD student in SCCS. She received a BA in Anthropology/Archaeology from Brigham Young University, and a MA in English: Film Studies from National University. Research interests include intersectional feminism related to post-war trauma, Easternism, diaspora communities, and identity, in film, television, and video games.
Austin Benson did an Undergraduate degree in Film & Media and an MA in Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies at Queen's. His research interests are in experimental and narrative production as well as film theory, history and criticism. For his Film 460 creative thesis he wrote a novel which he is now redrafting and created a work based on the text. He had a short film screened at KCFF '18 and as a writer has had publications in literary journals. Currently he is intent on taking his interests further in the 2019-2020 academic session to enhance the scope and style of his experimental media works, films and writings.
Research interests: transnational feminist theories and histories, queer theory, feminist methodologies and pedagogies, New York art world between 1960 and 1990, radical and experimental art practices, politics of labour in the arts, conceptualism, artist writings.
Canadian film and television, and in 2001 I started offering a senior-level seminar in film authorship that concentrates on the work of Nicholas Ray and Orson Welles. I've also been considering issues of film authorship in relation to my current research for a professional biography of Phillip Borsos (1953-1995), director of The Grey Fox, One Magic Christmas, Bethune: The Making of a Hero, and several other short and feature-length films. In addition to this work on Canadian film, I've devoted attention to a couple of other areas. The new edition of Television: Critical Methods and Applications, by Jeremy Butler, includes my revised chapter, "Music Television," which uses Lauryn Hill's Everything is Everything for a sample analysis.
Brandon Hocura is a sound artist, filmmaker, writer, and archivist. He is the founder and creative director of the record label and publisher Séance Centre. His research intersects with experimental poetics and ethnography, exploring the complex relationships between music, language, technology, geography, and culture. His recent research areas include iterative sound, autonomous distribution networks, visual & sound poetry, material histories, rogue archives, archipelagic theory, and diasporic traditions.
Cam is the Film and Media Technician working in the equipment room at the Isabel Bader Center for the Performing Arts. Cam helps our students navigate the world of equipment, cameras, and all related technical needs.
Chutong Yu is an MA student in Screen Cultures and Curatorial Studies and an interdisciplinary artist specializing in immersive media. Holding a BAH in Film and Media and a BEd from Queen’s University, Chutong examines how VR, AR, and MR transform storytelling, identity, and curatorial practices.
Clarke Mackey has been teaching in the Department of Film and Media at Queen’s University for 26 years. Before that he taught at York University and Sheridan College of Art and Design.
Clarke is an accomplished media producer. He has worked as a director, cinematographer, editor, producer or writer on over 50 film, television and new media projects. Many have won awards and critical acclaim. His first feature film, The Only Thing You Know (1971), won two Canadian Film Awards (now called Genies) including the Best Actress award. This film is considered by many critics to be an important film in the early development of independent cinema in this country.
Areas of research and supervisory interest include: Visual and popular cultures; genre cinemas; horror films & monster movies; death studies; feminist-queer-trans histories of Classical Hollywood; fan-based reading practices; superhero comic books; histories of Eugenic medicine and criminality in the West; curricular design and pedagogical strategies.