Matthew Kapell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Matthew Wilhelm Kapell (born August 14, 1969) is a historian and anthropologist best known for two edited academic volumes on popular culture and film. The first, (with William G. Doty) is Jacking In to the Matrix Franchise: Cultural Reception and Interpretation. The second is (with John Shelton Lawrence) Finding the Force of the Star Wars Franchise: Fans, Merchandise, and Critics (2006) and adds Wilhelm to his name. Both volumes provide multiple essays by academics and others on different cultural interpretations on the film franchises under examination. Kapell has also published a number of essays in the journal Extrapolation, and elsewhere, on speculative fiction in the United States as intellectual history.

He has co-authored chapters on the genetics of human growth and the effects of poverty on growth. The majority of this work appeared while he taught anthropology at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. Included among these are essays published mainly in edited European and Indian (Asia) works attacking ideas of genetic factors in determining development of height and body shape. Other publications include works on the computer game Civilization, Holocaustal images in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the American speculative fiction and socialist writer Mack Reynolds re-working of the Utopian fiction of Edward Bellamy, and Christian Romance fiction.

Kapell's work in history is mainly focused on the study of human growth and development in early twentieth century American social sciences.

[edit] External links

[1]

  • website on Jacking In to the Matrix Franchise and Finding the Force of the Star Wars Franchise