Jennifer Creech

Profile headshot

Jennifer Creech

Ecampus instructor of German
School of Language, Culture and Society

Corvallis, OR
United States

I am recently relocated to Corvallis after having spent a decade at the University of Rochester as Associate Professor of German in the Department of Modern Languages & Cultures, Affiliate Faculty in the Film & Media Studies Program, and Associate Faculty in the Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

I am the author of Mothers, Comrades & Outcasts in East German Women's Films (Indiana University Press, 2016), and have published on East German and post-unification cinema in Seminar and Women in German Yearbook. I am also the co-editor of Spectacle: German Visual Culture, vol. 2 (Oxford: Peter Lang, 2015) and How to Make the Body: Difference, Identity and Embodiment, Visual Cultures and German Contexts series (New York: Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2019). I am currently working on a collaborative book and documentary film project that explores the story of former Namibian refugees in East Germany, and am a member of the Digital Feminist Collective.

As an educator and a scholar in the humanities, I am interested in how digital technologies enable collaborative knowledge production in the public sphere. On my audio-visual criticism blog, I explore the audio-visual essay as a medium that is particularly relevant for film & media studies, and gender & sexuality studies. Combining the argumentative structure of the academic essay with the practice of filmmaking, audio-visual criticism provides us with a unique perspective on our objects of study and an opportunity for the creative production of knowledge.

Curriculum Vitae
Credentials
Ph.D. in Germanic Studies, University of Minnesota (2006)
M.A. in German Literature, University of Cincinnati (1999)
B.A. in English and German, Furman University (1996)
Research/Career Interests

My research and teaching interests include late 20th-century German literature, film and culture; cinema studies; Marxist and feminist theories; and audio-visual criticism