Sarah Projansky

Sarah Projansky is Associate Dean for Faculty and Academic Affairs in the College of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. She holds a joint appointment as professor in the department of film and media studies and professor in the department of gender studies. Projansky's previous position prior to the University of Utah was the Associate Head of the Department of Media and Cinema Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where she was also a member of the Academic Senate Executive Committee. Projansky was Co-Chair of the Women's Caucus of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies, and she has served as Chair of the Critical and Cultural Studies Division of the National Communication Association.

Editorial boards

Projansky teaches Film Theory, Introduction to TV, Gender and Contemporary Issues, Girl Films, Film and Television Stars, and Feminist Girls’ Media Studies.

Education

Honors and awards

Publications

Spectacular Girls: Media Fascination and Celebrity Culture (2014)

Girls uses a queer, anti-racist feminist approach to explore the diversity of girlhood in contemporary popular culture. From a universal figure girls are spectacles. Girls are visual objects in society and always on display. Projansky addresses two key themes: simultaneous adoration and disregard for girls and the frequency of whiteness and heterosexuality. Projansky discusses the difference between two opposite ideas of the ‘can do’ girl and a troubled girl needing protection and regulation. Projansky in Spectacular Girls discusses homosexual girls, girls of colour, feminist girls, active girls and sexual girls, all of these factors are present if we look for them. Projansky draws upon examples across films, television, mass-market magazines and newspapers, live sports TV, and the internet. Projansky uses many forms of analysing careful, creative, feminist analysis intent on centring alternative girls. Projansky argues that feminist media studies needs to understand the spectral of girlhood more fully.

Watching Rape: Film and Television in Postfeminist Culture (2001)

Watching Rape was published in 2001 and undermines the complacent view of equality for woman. Projansky’s analysis of depictions of rape in US film, television, and independent video. In Watching Rape Projansky addresses the relationship regarding post feminism and rape. Projansky challenges readers of Watching Rape to view popular culture as a part of our everyday lives. Projansky writes about how media has changed the way society view rape and feminism differently over time. Projansky addresses how gender, race, class, nationality and sexuality influence the future of feminist politics, theory, and criticism with regard to issues of sexual violence, post feminism and popular media. Watching Rape is a crucial contribution to contemporary feminism.

Co-Editor of Enterprise Zones: Critical Positions on Star Trek (2006)

Enterprise Zones is a cultural studies analysis of Star Trek: The Next Generation”. Enterprise Zones address the topics of hegemony, utopias, militarism, colonialism, gender, violence, race, class, sexuality by analysing individual episodes and overarching themes. Enterprising Zones was the first critical, scholarly look at Star Trek. Enterprising Zones defines relationships within the film and depicts gender relations and cultural conditions. Sexual aggression and violence is address. Readers will discover the unique changes of cultural studies scholarship and how it enables to appoint a powerful phenomenon such as Star Trek. Enterprising Zones is made up of thirteen essays which address the many aspects of Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Projansky had published articles surrounding sexuality in film, television, and U.S. popular culture, gender, race and convergence media in Cinema Journal, Velvet Light Trap, Signs, and various anthologies.

Presentations

Professional service

Internal service

Affiliations

References

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