The Videographic Essay: Practice and PedagogyMain MenuThe Videographic EssayTable of ContentsIntroduction, Acknowledgements, and Further ReadingScholarship in Sound & Image: A Pedagogical EssayPedagogical essay authored by Christian Keathley and Jason MittellDissolves of PassionIn Dialogue: Eric Faden and Kevin B. LeeBecoming Videographic Critics: A Roundtable ConversationA conversation among practitioners curated by Jason MittellBut Is Any Of This Legal?Videographic ExercisesGallery of All ExercisesCreditsChristian Keathley0199b522721abf067a743773a226b6064fe22f8cJason Mittell06e96b1b57c0e09d70492af49d984ee2f68945deCatherine Grantc9eab209ad26b2e418453515f6418aa2cbe20309
Jordan Schonig
12019-06-11T21:38:54-07:00Jason Mittell06e96b1b57c0e09d70492af49d984ee2f68945de75431structured_gallery2019-06-11T21:38:55-07:00Jason Mittell06e96b1b57c0e09d70492af49d984ee2f68945deJordan Schonig holds a PhD in Cinema and Media Studies from the University of Chicago, where he is currently a Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow in the Humanities. His dissertation, "Cinema’s Motion Forms: Film Theory, the Digital Turn, and the Possibilities of Cinematic Motion," rethinks central debates in film theory by examining the phenomenology of cinematic motion. He is broadly interested in the intersections between philosophical aesthetics and film theory, phenomenological approaches to film studies, and genealogies of modernism in film and the other arts. He published "The Follow Shot," the video he started at the 2017 workshop, in [in]Transition.
12019-06-11T18:54:19-07:00Jason Mittell06e96b1b57c0e09d70492af49d984ee2f68945deGravity Epigraph3An exercise by Jordan Schonigplain2019-06-11T18:58:36-07:00Jason Mittell06e96b1b57c0e09d70492af49d984ee2f68945de