John MacKay
Professor, Slavic Languages & Literatures
Chair, Film Studies Program
2707 Hall of Graduate Studies, 432-7202
john.mackay@yale.edu
Education
B.A. 1987 (English), University of British Columbia; 1989,
Certificate in Russian, Pushkin Institute, Moscow; Ph. D.
1998, Yale University (Comparative Literature).
Interests
19th- and 20th-century Russian literature, Russian and Soviet
culture, comparative literature, literary and cultural theory,
film studies (esp. film theory and documentary cinema)
Current
courses
Russian Culture: The Modern Age; Old Russian Culture Through
Cinema; 19th-Century Russian Culture Through Cinema; Russian
Film; The Utopian
Imagination in Russia; Slavery and Serfdom in Russian and
American
Literature; Issues in Contemporary Film Theory
Recent
Publications
Stride Soviet (1926) and Vertovian Technophobia
Disorganized Noise: 'Enthusiasm' and the Ear of the Collective. (KinoKultura Journal)
Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to Mandelstam (Indiana University Press)
Dziga Vertov: Life and Work (forthcoming from Indiana
University Press)
Allegory and Accommodation: Vertov's Three Songs of Lenin (1934) as a Stalinist Film (forthcoming in Film History: revised 1 Nov 2006)
Film Energy: Process and Metanarrative in Dziga Vertov's "The Eleventh Year" (1928) (Forthcoming in "October").
The “Subjective” Camera in Vertov’s Lullaby (1937)
|