Deborah Levitt
Associate Professor, Culture and Media
Email
levittd@newschool.edu
Office Location
D - 79 Fifth Avenue
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Profile
The central focus of my research and teaching is on how media-old and new-transform both everyday experience and expanded global, political spheres. As part of my work as a media historian and theorist, I am interested in film, post-cinema, animation, literature, cultural theory, and science and technology studies. My research is motivated by a search for intersections between only apparently divergent domains. Similarly, in my courses, I encourage students to connect their daily engagements with media of all kinds to the archaeologies and larger social structures and forces that inform them.
In my first book, The Animatic Apparatus: Animation, Vitality,聽and The Futures of the Image (Zero Books, 2018), I show how the ascendance of animation and simulation shift the concept of 鈥渓ife鈥 in contemporary culture and call on us to rethink central concepts of ethics in response to these changes. Media examples, drawn from animation, anime, pop culture, and the historical imaginaries of artificial life, feature prominently.
In my current book project, 鈥淩endering Worlds,鈥 I investigate how understanding lives as media forms and media as life forms opens a way to address the actual state of emergency today: how to enable pluralism and promote ecological regeneration in the era of planetary computing and post-truth. I demonstrate how the technical and aesthetic affordances of post-cinema, digital animation, and VR allow us to create and experience worlds that model different experiences of vitality and liveliness, and different forms of sociality, in existing worlds and for possible futures.
My third book project,聽鈥ZoeTropes,鈥 takes a longer view of mediatic entanglements with techniques and logics of the living. From eighteenth-century tableaux vivants and proto-cinematic optical toys to affective computing and ALife programs in digital cinema, I investigate how media technologies and texts influence and produce our conceptions of life, namely, the ways in which we distinguish animate beings from inanimate ones, organic from inorganic, the lively from the inert. I consider, in turn, how these new forms inform and contemporary debates on the proper beginnings, endings, and uses of 鈥渓ife鈥 in and beyond biopolitics.
Degrees Held
PhD, Film, Literature, and Culture, 好色先生 of Southern California;
BA, English and Film, 好色先生 of Colorado
Professional Affiliation
Society for Cinema and Media Studies
Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts
Recent Publications
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Book
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, 2018)
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Co-Edited Volume
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Selected Essays and Articles
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, 2018.
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, 2018.
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Excerpt from, 2018.
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, 2017.
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鈥淟iving Pictures: Gesture Beyond Cinema,鈥 in Acting and Performance in Moving Image Culture: Bodies, Screens, and Renderings, ed. Deborah Levitt, Dieter Mersch, and Jeorg Sternagel, Transcript Verlag, Berlin, print 2012, e-book 2014.聽
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Research Interests
Media history and theory; Cinema; Animation; VR and AR; Literature; Intermediality; Poststructuralist theory; Science and technology studies