I am part of a new team whose mission is to develop Film and Media teaching at the OU. It's my job to create equitable cultures for learning and growing, particularly in the rapidly expanding field of the creative industries. I've worked extensively with screen industry organisations to improve conditions for workers, and I am also a researcher of disability, gender and sexuality in film cultures, an author of creative non-fiction and art-writing, and a curator-programmer of slow, care-led film experiences. I have an emerging social practice as a collaborative artist-filmmaker. My priority is to foreground and amplify the voices of those less well heard.
I am an accredited Relational Dynamic Coach (June 2023) and a Mindful Self-Compassion teacher-in-training (Practicum achieved March 2023). I use these skills to develop high-trust, compassionate and collaborative working environments.
I joined the OU in March 2024. I have previously worked at the universities of Reading, Queen Mary, Leicester and Cambridge. I received my PhD in contemporary French cinema and philosophy from the University of Cambridge in 2009. I have also worked outside academia as a consultant and industry researcher, editor and translator.
I am an interdisciplinary researcher of visual cultures who has always been interested in bodies. How and why bodies matter, which bodies are considered to 'fit' and which aren't, who holds power over bodies (human and otherwise) and how we come to know the world through our bodies, are always my starting questions, in one form or another.
As Co-Investigator on the flagship Digital Humanities AHRC-funded project The Legacies of Stephen Dwoskin's Personal Cinema (£970,000, 2018-2022), which was an inaugural case study for the University of Reading Digital Humanities Hub. Our team of artists, archivists, film and art historians, information and data scientists and computer scientists developed an innovative "360 degree" analysis of the digital and non-digital archive of the Brooklyn-born, diasporic Jewish, disabled artist-polymath Stephen Dwoskin (1939-2012). I wrote about Dwoskin's controversial, genderqueer performances and digital activism on- and off-camera for journals like MIRAJ, Film Quarterly and Jewish Film and New Media, and collaborated with data scientists and computer scientists to develop data visualisations and AI models that would better facilitate access to the sensitive content of Dwoskin's digital archive, and to longitudinal studies of Dwoskin's filmmaking. My role also lead to new innovations in accessible experimental film curation at the LUX and BFI. With former PI Professor Rachel Garfield I am co-editing a critical anthology about Dwoskin, forthcoming with the BFI in 2025. With Rachel and Dr Melanie Jackson at the Royal College of Art, I am currently developing I Am A Cultural Asset, a bid for AHRC follow-on funding to facilitate self-lead artist organisations marginalised though lived experience of class, race and disability to develop sustainably via knowledge and skillsharing.
My second monograph, Museums and the Moving Image: Cine-museology, Cultural Politics, Film is forthcoming with Bloomsbury, and tracks the cultural, political and philosophical influence of moving images (performance documentation, video art, documentary and screen media) on public museums from the mid-20th century to the present day.
In my curatorial practice, for the last few years I have co-developed a compassionate, care-led project called How Do You Feel Cinema, with Creative Director Gaylene Gould. Funded by Research England, the BFI, and the University of Reading, the project uses participatory, embodied and co-creative methods to create warm, inclusive, hospitable spaces where cultural leaders and audiences can better understand their own feelings about film, each other, and the wider world.
Lastly, I am a writer of creative non-fiction. My queer ecological project on the cultural history of queerness in botany, horticulture and visual art, Q is for Garden, was shortlisted for the Fitzcarraldo Essay Prize, longlisted for the Nan Shepherd Prize and an extract was shortlisted for the Nature Chronicles Prize and published in an anthology by Saraband in 2022. In 2023 I was selected as a mentor for an emerging writer via the Ruppin Agency and the Lucy Writers Platform Arts-Council funded project, What The Water Gave Us. My memoir essay on diaspora, water and intergenerational trauma was published in an anthology by Takeaway Press. In June 2024 my essay on ecological intimacy, grief and land rights was published in THIS ALLOTMENT, an anthology edited by Sarah Rigby at Elliott and Thompson.
I work regularly as a consultant, curator and expert for galleries, film institutions, and the creative industries.
Recent examples of my impact-generating work outside academia:
2023:
2022:
2021:
Backdating the Crip Technoscience Manifesto: Stephen Dwoskin’s Digital Activism (2022)
Chamarette, Jenny
Film Quarterly, 76(2) (pp. 16-24)