James DiGiovanna
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James DiGiovanna | |
Born | June 1, 1965 Alabama, USA |
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Occupation | Film Critic, Academic |
James DiGiovanna is an award-winning film reviewer and filmmaker, and the author of a number of published short stories. Together with Bob Grimm, he is one of two Cinema Writers on the staff of Tucson Weekly.[1] He is currently a Substitute Professor at the Department of Art, Music and Philosophy at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
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[edit] Education
DiGiovanna received his PhD from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 2001.[2] His doctoral thesis, Ethics and Aesthetics of Self-Creation, is an exploration of the idea, in Pico, Milton, Blake, Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, that humans are tasked with creating themselves.
[edit] Professional Work
DiGiovanna co-wrote, directed, and produced the film A Forked World (2004) together with Carey Burtt,[3], in addition to several other collaborations. In his blog The Daily Dish, Andrew Sullivan described their parody of a political attack ad on Immanuel Kant[4] as "hilarious."[5]
Currently, DiGiovanna teaches at Stony Brook's Manhattan graduate program in Philosophy of Art, and is working on the question of the creation of worlds in art and the effect of neural interface technologies and mechanical prostheses on identity and self realization.
His writing, which appears regularly in the Tucson Weekly, includes an article in High Noon On The Electronic Frontier (MIT Press) and a story in 20 X 18 (Cooper Union Press).
[edit] Publications and Articles
- DiGiovanna, James. 1996. "Losing Your Voice on the Internet" in High Noon on the Electronic Frontier: Conceptual Issues in Cyberspace (Cambridge, MA: MIT).