Contributors
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Alain Dubeau
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Matt Dupee
Matthew DuPée is an author and horror film enthusiast who lives in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned a BFA in Film & Video Production from Point Park University and his wide array of works have been published in Rue Morgue, Bright Lights Film Journal, and Morbidly Beautiful. He is currently completing a book for McFarland Press examining the history of contemporary Christmas horror films.
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David Durnell
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Betty Merin Eapen
Betty Merin Eapen is currently a Junior Research Fellow in Vimala College, Thrissur under Calicut University, Kerala, India. After completing her M.Phil Degree in 2018, she worked as an Assistant Professor on contract for two years. She has published research articles in journals and chapters in books. Her research interest areas are memory studies, trauma studies, and historiography.
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Kelly Egan
Dr. Kelly Egan is an Assistant Professor in Visual and Media Studies within the Cultural Studies Department at Trent University. Kelly is a Canadian filmmaker, animated sound composer, film archivist and scholar. Her filmwork explores issues of materiality, intermediality, and media obsolescence. Her films have been screened at major festivals across Canada and internationally, including the Toronto International Film Festival, the Images Festival, the New York International Film Festival, the Rotterdam, International Film Festival and EXiS Experimental Film and Video Festival. Her film-based installations have been exhibited at the York Quays Gallery/Harbourfront Centre in Toronto, and L’espace virtuel in Chicoutimi, PQ.
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Elena El Earthbourne
Elena Rodina (artist name El Earthbourne) is a Russian-American theater and film director/writer. Originally trained as an architect in Russia (Ph.D., 1998, St. Petersburg State University of Architecture) and in Japan (Waseda University, 1999-2000). From 2006 devoted her life to theater and film directing/writing/analyzing. Studied theater and film science/directing in Berlin, Germany (The Akademie and Freie University of Berlin, 2008-2011). Currently lives in New York City and holds the post of the Director of the Literature and Art house Program for the Pushkin Society in America. Other articles by Rodina include The Fractal Dimension of Tokyo Streets. For more info on Elena Rodina.
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Patrick Ellis
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Clint Enns
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Andrés Estrada
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Giulio Evangelista
Giulio Evangelista is an undergraduate student specializing in Film Studies at the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. His research focuses on the democratization of intellectual and technological capital in the postmodern era. His work has been published in Offscreen and The Concordian. Outside of the arts, his interests include media studies, foreign affairs, and all things combat sports. You can follow him on Twitter.
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Aden Evens
Aden Evens is Assistant Professor of English at Dartmouth College, specializing in new media. His current research explores the creative possibilities and limitations of digital technologies, starting from a theory of digital ontology. His first book, Sound Ideas (University of Minnesota Press 2005), is a phenomenological study of the effects of technology on the aesthetics of music and sound. Under the project name, “re:,” Aden has released two records of electroacoustic music on the Constellation label based in Montréal.
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Mojgan Eyvazi
Mojgan Eyvazi, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the English Department at Payame Noor University, 19395-4697 Tehran, I. R. of Iran. She received her Ph.D. degree from Pune University, India. The title of her dissertation was “Human Predicament in Selected Works of Tennessee Williams,” which was revised into a book in 2008, Human predicament: Study of Tennessee Williams’ Selected Plays/, Tehran: Kelke Simin Publications. Her areas of specialization are drama and literary criticism. Her published essays include, “Man and Myth.” Asian Quarterly. 4 (May 2006), 26-34.
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Anna Fahr
Anna Fahr is an independent filmmaker whose work focuses on the contemporary Middle East and diaspora. Her latest narrative short, Transit Game (2014) examines the current refugee crisis in Lebanon against the backdrop of the Syrian war. The film has screened in dozens of festivals internationally winning awards in Berlin, Florence and San Francisco in addition to winning a Golden Sheaf Award for ‘Best Drama’ at the Yorkton Film Festival in Canada. In 2006, Anna independently produced/directed/edited the feature-length documentary, Khaneh Ma: These Places We Call Home, which examines issues of cultural identity and dual nationality from the vantage point of three generations of Iranians living in Iran, Canada, and Germany. The film screened theatrically at the National Film Board of Canada cinema in Montreal and in festivals worldwide. Anna holds a B.F.A. in Film Production from Concordia University in Montreal and a Master’s in Film and Middle Eastern Studies from New York University. In additional to filmmaking, Anna is an educator who has taught at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and in the department of Communication Arts at the Lebanese American University in Beirut.
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Hannah Ferguson
Hannah Ferguson recently completed her second year studying Art History and Studio Art at Concordia University. She enjoys the interplay between the visual and textual that emerges in the space between creating and writing about art, and is interested in research-creation. She is interested in pursuing research about feminism and film, the archive, and the intersection of medical and art history. Her writing has also been published in the Concordia Undergraduate Journal of Art History.
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Adèle Flannery
Adèle Flannery, graduated from the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema in 2010 with a specialization in Film Studies. Following her undergraduate degree, she completed a Master’s of Information Studies at McGill University. She has worked as a liaison librarian at l’Université du Québec à Montréal (UQÀM) since 2013. Her passion for film has not wained; she is an active user of the library’s audiovisual collection.
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Vanessa Dion Fletcher
Vanessa Dion Fletcher is a multidisciplinary artist and curator. Her work is a process of investigating the influence of culture and politics on the relationship between our bodies and the land. In 2012 She co-curated Emnowaangosjig || Coming Out: The Shifting and Multiple Self at the Toronto Free Gallery. Twisting Conventions: A Feminist Indigenous Perspective on the Horror was written as part of the Vtape curatorial fellowship. Dion Fletcher is currently pursuing a Masters of Fine Art in Performance at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
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Marie-Eve Fortin
Marie-Eve Fortin is a Ph. D. graduate in Film studies and Arts and Media from Université de Montréal and Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris 3 respectively. Her thesis entitled Satirical parodies and documentary expressionism : the critical representation of the celebrity in the films of William Klein, analyses the use of celebrities by power structures as ideological vectors to influence the masses. Marie-Eve’s research interests also include the representation of occult arts and sciences in Sub-Saharan West-African cinema. Marie-Eve taught Documentary Cinema at Université de Montréal and Independent American Filmmakers of the 1980s and 1990s at Concordia University. She participated in a number of international conferences and film festivals including FESPACO in Burkina Faso, Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland and recently the Cannes Film Festival in France. She also curated the film retrospective and photography exhibition entitled: William Klein : The dissident eye presented at the Cinémathèque québécoise during the New Cinema Film Festival.
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John Fucile
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Robert Fuoco
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Jamie Gaetz