Additional Contact Information
Dr Hristova is a historian of U.S. media and culture. Her research is at the intersection of media and communication history, critical whiteness studies, gender studies, social movements, and critical approaches to methodology. Dr Hristova's current research examines the history of women's labour in media and communication research and its implications for disciplinary foundations and research methodology.Â
Dr Hristova teaches modules on visual culture, gender, race, research methods, media ethics, and social movements.
Qualifications
- PhD: Communication Studies - Critical Media Studies (Graduate Minor in American Studies) --- University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA
University of Minnesota, - BA: American Studies and English Literature (Hons) --- University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
University of Sussex, - MPhil: American Studies --- University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
University of Sussex,
Postgraduate Project Opportunities
Publications
2024
- Published
Hristova, E., Sept 2024.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E., Dorsten, A.-M. & Stabile, C., 16 Jan 2024, The Ghost Reader: Recovering Women’s Contributions to Media Studies. London: Goldsmiths Press
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E., 16 Jan 2024, The Ghost Reader: Recovering Women’s Contributions to Media Studies . Hristova, E., Stabile, C. & Dorsten, A.-M. (eds.). London: Goldsmiths Press
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E., 5 Jul 2024, Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇå°æ. 152 p.
Research output: Book/Report › Anthology - Published
Hristova, E., 22 Feb 2024, The Ghost Reader Digital Companion.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article - Published
Stabile, C., Risam, R., McCullers, T., Tokos, L., Yousaf, M., Hristova, E. & Dorsten, A.-M., 20 Feb 2024, REANIMATE.
Research output: Other contribution - Published
Hristova, E. (Editor), Dorsten, A.-M. (Editor) & Stabile, C. (Editor), 16 Jan 2024, London: Goldsmiths Press. 224 p.
Research output: Book/Report › Book › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E. & Dorsten, A.-M., 22 Jan 2024, The Conversation.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article - Published
Hristova, E., 30 May 2024.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
2022
- Published
Hristova, E., 2022, In: International Journal of Communication. 16, p. 655-663
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
2018
- Published
Hristova, E., 18 Oct 2018, Rockefeller Archive Center.
Research output: Book/Report › Commissioned report
2017
- Published
Hristova, E. (Editor) & Zimmerman, H. (Editor), 2017, In: Teaching Media Quarterly. 5, 1
Research output: Contribution to journal › Special issue › peer-review
2016
- Published
Hristova, E., 1 Oct 2016, In: European Journal of Communication. 31, 5, p. 609-612
Research output: Contribution to journal › Book/Film/Article review › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E., Dec 2016, Cultures of Comics Work. Brienza, C. & Johnston, P. (eds.). London: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 65-80
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review - Published
Hristova, E. (Editor), 2016, In: Teaching Media Quarterly. 4, 1
Research output: Contribution to journal › Special issue › peer-review
2015
- Published
Hristova, E., 1 Mar 2015, In: Teaching Media Quarterly. 3, 1
Research output: Contribution to journal › Special issue › peer-review
2014
- Published
Hristova, E., Dec 2014, In: International Journal of Comic Art. 16, 2, p. 132-152
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Activities
2024
End of year showcase of creative and research work by students in the School of Arts, Culture, and Language
7 Jul 2024
Links:
Roundtable discussion with Film, Media, and Journalism undergraduate students whose Research Projects received First Class marks.
7 Jul 2024
Activity: Types of Public engagement and outreach - Festival/Exhibition (Organiser)Academic canons are, by definition, contrary to expansion. They identify, fix, and calcify knowledge about origins, figures, and ideas that characterize the boundaries of a particular field. Those calcifications are then perpetuated by curricula that follow conventional wisdom in lockstep. Thus, ideas perceived to be unconventional to a field—outside those boundaries—are marginalized until they are virtually invisible. The papers in this panel intervene in traditional historiographic processes in the field of media studies and chart a new trajectory for teaching the history of media studies, of mass communication, of media theory, and of journalism.
Our panel features the work and careers of several women who were either marginalized in—or excluded from—the traditional media studies canon because of their gender, race, political affiliation, or identity. Each woman represented a revolutionary idea, approach, category of media - public access to images, anti-racist cultural criticism and journalism, and holding Hollywood studios accountable for the products they produce. The contributions of these women underscore, not only the need to question the current canon, but also the need to question the goal of canonization itself. These women have the potential to decentralize and expand our knowledge about media studies history.
Collectively, this panel addresses the intersection of feminist historical recovery and teaching, especially in the undergraduate classroom. Diana Kamin explores the uses of the Picture Collection at NY Public Library, originally curated by Roman Javitz. Elena Hristova critically reflects on teaching in the undergraduate classroom with Fredi Washington’s columns in the People’s Voice as a way to provide a usable political past to students developing their practice as cultural critics. Aimee-Marie Dorsten surveys the research of Mae D. Huettig, Jeannette Sayre Smith, and Helen MacGill Hughes to provide an important feminist history to the development of the political economy of communication.
The panel provides an opportunity to revise, recover, and teach a richer history of media studies by highlighting women who were researchers, innovators, and progressive public intellectuals and critics. We aim to show that the relationship between these women and their ideas offer more robust teaching materials and methods than the current media studies historiography can provide. Mary Vavrus will provide a response to the papers presented.
30 May 2024
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker)14 Feb 2024
Links:
2023
6 Dec 2023
Links:
2015
The Circle: Native American News and Arts
3 Dec 2015
Activity: Types of Public engagement and outreach - Media article or participation (Contributor)States of Incarceration: A National Dialogue of Local Histories, The New School’s Humanities Action Lab national travelling exhibit
2015 – 2018
Links: