Jeffrey Sconce

Jeffrey Sconce is a professor and cultural historian of media and film.[1] He is an associate professor in the Screen Cultures program at Northwestern University. [2][3][4]

Early life and education

Sconce has a B.A., B.S., and M.A. from the University of Texas, Austin, and a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin Madison.

Career

He is the author of Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television, published by Duke University Press in 2000.[5] Chapters from Haunted Media have been translated into French and German. He is also the editor of Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Financing, published by Duke University Press in 2007.

As a media historian, Sconce's work concentrates primarily on the occult and supernatural history of electronic media technologies.

His 1995 article, "Trashing the Academy: Taste, Excess and an Emerging Politics of Cinematic Style," introduced the concept of paracinema, meaning an interest in low, tasteless and otherwise disreputable forms of cinema.[6][7] "Trashing the Academy" has been reprinted in several anthologies on cult film.[8] [9][10]

His 2002 article, "Irony, Nihilism, and the New American 'Smart' Cinema," introduced the concept of "smart cinema" to describe the stylistic and thematic interests of American independent filmmakers such as P.T. Anderson, Todd Solondz, Neil LaBute, and Todd Haynes.[11]

Sconce has also written exhibition catalog essays for several contemporary visual artists, including Mike Kelley, Joshua Bonnetta, and Romeo Grünfelder.

Selected works

References

  1. Mary Hammond (3 March 2016). Charles Dickens's Great Expectations: A Cultural Life, 1860–2012. Routledge. pp. 12–. ISBN 978-1-317-16825-6.
  2. " Film students find beauty in the darkest places". Purdue Exponent, October 8, 2015 By DANIELLE WILKINSON
  3. "Should Gloriously Terrible Movies Like The Room Be Considered 'Outsider Art'?". The Atlantic, Adam Rosen Oct 8, 2013
  4. "Chicago fans celebrate the return of 'Entourage' by gathering their own". RedEye Chicago. Jun 2, 2015 Lauren Cval.
  5. "Google Scholar Report"
  6. Steven Jay Schneider; Tony Williams (2005). Horror International. Wayne State University Press. pp. 11–. ISBN 0-8143-3101-7.
  7. "Why calling a movie ‘bad’ doesn’t mean what it used to". Adam Nayman, National Post | July 22, 2014
  8. Cornrich, Ian (2009). Horror Zone. I.B. Taurus.
  9. The Cult Film Reader. Open University Press. 2008.
  10. Film Theory and Criticism (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004.
  11. Perkins, Claire (2012). American Smart Cinema. Edinburgh University Press.
  12. Jennifer Fisher; Mentoring Artists for Women's Art; DisplayCult (Group of artists) (2006). Technologies of Intuition. YYZ Books. pp. 28–. ISBN 978-0-920397-43-5.


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