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Society for Cinema and Media Studies 2019

This March, I presented my research at the Society for Cinema and Media Studies conference in Seattle, WA. I was part of a panel called “Saving Whiteness,” which discussed various manifestations of white supremacist ideology, practices, and aesthetics in the media.

My paper discussed the German propaganda film, Jud Suß (1940); specifically, I analyzed actress Kristina Söderbaum’s role as Dorothea in the film, as well as her star persona, to discuss how the female body was used as a cultural symbol of National Socialism. I argued the film exploits both the public “star” of Söderbaum as an abstract symbol of the Nazi ‘feminine’ ideal to enhance and further the film’s message of anti-semitism. Söderbaum’s body becomes a symbol of the German community (volksgemeinschaft). Thus, the film uses the rape of Dorothea (Söderbaum) to represent both the literal threat (of racial impurity and the Jews) but also as a figurative threat (the vulnerability of the women, and thus, the Volk to corruption); in doing so, the rape of Söderbaum in the film effectively mobilized feelings of nationalism and personal patriotism by linking the feminine body with the political body.

On Sunday, I participated in a closed seminar called “Feminist Assemblages.” Each of the participants shared an opinion piece, and the seminar was a space to discuss the many dynamic and engaging ideas presented in the papers. This led to a broad theoretical discussion where we were able to point to connections across disciplines, areas of theory, and nationalities to achieve a fuller (though by no means comprehensive) understanding of the areas which media studies and feminism work in tandem.

(Apologies for the blurry photo)

As a young scholar with much to learn and not even a graduate degree to my name, the experience of attending such a large and dynamic conference was invaluable to my growth and budding confidence as I continue to pursue my research. I look forward (hopefully) to next year!

Featured Writing: Peephole Journal

I wrote an essay discussing a scene from Joe Wright’s film Anna Karenina (2012) which is now published in Issue 11 of Peephole Journal. In the essay, I put a scene from Wright’s film in conversation with theorist, Helen Cixous, and contextualize the difference between the film’s adaption and Tolstoy’s original intent. I hope you find it as fun to read as it was to write.

Here’s the link: http://peepholejournal.tv/issue/11/04-downey/

Be sure to check out the other exciting articles in Peephole and happy reading!

Society for Utopian Studies Conference

This November, I will be presenting at the 2018 Society for Utopian Studies conference in Berkeley, CA. The theme of the conference is “Disruption, Displacement, and Disorder”.

This will be my first foray into the world of academic conferences and I’m glad it will be with a community of idealistic scholars who enjoy imagining the world not as it it, but as it could be. I find this mindset reassuring, as perhaps it will help the audience to imagine, if for some reason my presentation is a disaster, what it could have been had I not been so overwhelmed by nerves.

My presentation is titled “Genocide and Virginity, Dystopia and Utopia: A Reconciliation through Film”. I will be discussing three films from the Third Reich: HitlerJunge Quex (1933), Jud Süß (1940), and  Die Große Liebe (1942). I will analyze their content and actors in an effort to understand how the ideals and goals of National Socialism were understood by individuals and how these films acted as a mechanism of controlled education. I argue the films to discuss how the films reconciled the paradoxes in Nazi platitudes and practice, rhetoric and reality, life and liminality to argue the films taught Germans how they ought to behave and limited how citizens could imagine acts of resistance to the regime. Finally, I compare films of the Third Reich to modern dystopian films, like Hunger Games, Black Panther, and Avatar, which provide images of reality and ideas of resistance but have little translation into actual resistance. I ask: What role does film really play in teaching us about our realities? Our possibilities?

I look forward to hearing the great ideas and about the research projects of the other participants and attendees of the conference.

If you would like to learn more about the conference or SUS check out: https://utopian-studies.org/

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