Masha Salazkina, PhD
- Professor (Film Studies), Cinema
- Concordia University Research Chair in Transnational Media Arts and Cultures
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Biography
Dr Salazkina has published essays in Cinema Journal, Film History, October, Screen, Framework, Canadian Journal of Film Studies, and many edited collections on such topics as the geopolitics of film and media theory production; theorizations of World Cinema; history of film education; cinemas of solidarity and internationalism. She also co-edited Sound, Speech, Music in Soviet and Post-Soviet Cinema (2015) and Global Perspectives on Amateur Film Histories and Cultures (2022, both from Indiana University Press).
Her current research projects center on the reception of Latin American popular media in the Soviet bloc in the 1970s-1980s, and the shared history of the circulation of popular music across the Global South and the Socialist bloc.
Education
PhD (Yale University)Keywords
internationalism; film festivals; film education; postsocialismTeaching activities
Graduate seminars:
FMST 802 Global and Transnational Methods in Film and Media Research (PhD)
FMST 804 Cinemas of Global Socialism
FMST807 Transnational Approaches to Media and Migration (PhD)
FMST807 Geopolitics of Film and Media Studies (PhD)
FMST600 Writing and Researching Cinema (MA)
FMST800 Film Education: Historical Approaches (PhD)
Undergraduate courses:
FMST412 Geographies of Cinema: Socialism and After
FMST211 Film History to 1959
FMST 315 Contemporary Film Theory
Publications
Select recent writings (full text available online):
"World Cinema as Method" (2020, Canadian Journal of Film Studies vol 29 issue 2)
https://www.academia.edu/44712852/WORLD_CINEMA_AS_METHOD
“Introduction: Global perspectives on amateur film cultures” (with Enrique Fibla), in Global Perspectives on Amateur Film Cultures, Indiana University Press, forthcoming 2020
- “Eisenstein in Latin America” in The Flying Carpet. Studies on Eisenstein and Russian Cinema, eds. Joan Neuberger and Antonio Somaini, Éditions Mimésis, 2018.
https://www.academia.edu/35308615/Eisenstein_in_Latin_America
- “Transnational Genealogies of Institutional Film Culture of Cuba, 1960s-70s” in The Routledge Companion to Latin American Cinema, eds. Marvin D’Lugo, Ana M. López and Laura Podalsky, Routledge, 2018
- “Translating the Academe: Conceptualizing the Transnational in Film and Media Studies” in The Multilingual Screen: New Reflections on Cinema and Linguistic Difference, eds. Lisa Patti and Tijana Mamula, Bloomsbury, 2016.
“(V)GIK and the History of Film Education in the Soviet Union, 1920s-1940s” in Companion to Russian Cinema, ed. Birgit Beumers, Wiley-Blackwell Press, 2016
- “Tashkent ’68: A Cinematic Contact Zone” (with Rossen Djagalov), Slavic Review Special Issue on Soviet Geopoetics, 2016
https://www.academia.edu/26039277/Tashkent_68_A_Cinematic_Contact_Zone
- “Dissonances in 1970s European and Latin American Political Film Discourse: The Aristarco-Garcia Espinosa Debate” (with Irene Rozsa) in Canadian Journal of Film Studies 24.2, 2015
- “Estates General of Third Cinema: Montreal’74” (with Mariano Mestman) in Canadian Journal of Film Studies 24.2, 2015
https://www.academia.edu/24519795/Introduction_Estates_General_of_Third_Cinema_Montreal_74
- “Geopolitics of Film and Media Theory in the Age of Neoliberal Globalization” in Framework 56-2, 2015
“Moscow, Rome, L’Havana: A Film Theory Roadmap” October 139, Winter 2012
https://www.academia.edu/6630668/Moscow_Rome_Havana_A_Film_Theory_Road_Map
- “Soviet-Indian Coproductions: Alibaba as Political Allegory. ”Cinema Journal 49. No 4, Summer 2010
https://www.academia.edu/6630666/Soviet_Indian_Coproductions_Alibaba_as_Political_Allegory