Lisa Bernard
Franklin Cason
Julian Cornell
Sofia Fasos
Elizabeth Foley
David Gould
Thomas Grochowski
Dr. Thomas Grochowski (MFA Brooklyn College, PhD New York University) has taught at Queens College since 1996. His research interests include: issues of gender and race in media (both theoretical and historical), documentary film, and new media. He has published work on media and the O.J. Simpson case in the scholarly journals Television and New Media and International Journal of Cultural Studies. Recent publications include contributions to anthologies about the Marx Brothers, Sex and the City, and Routledge’s Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film. His most recent piece, on Woody Allen, was published in the anthology Jews and Sex. Courses he has taught at Queens College include: Media Criticism. History of Cinema, History of Broadcasting, Television Theory/Criticism, Film Theory, and Popular Music, Technology, and Society. He has also taught at Brooklyn College, John Jay College, Hunter College, and Seton Hall University. His is currently Assistant Professor of English at Saint Joseph’s College, Long Island, where he is developing the recently approved minor in film and media studies; every summer since 2001, he has taught his popular MEDST 381W course, Rock and Roll Films.
Valerie Lisyansky
Moya Luckett
Juan Monroy
jmonroy@qc.cuny.edu
http://www.juanmonroy.com
Juan Monroy has taught courses on introductory film, film history, media theory, broadcasting history, and the economics of the television industry at Queens College, New York University, Fordham University Lincoln Center, the New School, and Marymount Manhattan College.
His research interests include television history, political economy of television, and media and globalization. His dissertation is a study of how the United States employed television to promote economic development as an anti-communist project in Latin America during the 1960s, following the Cuban Revolution. The recipient of research fellowships from the NYU Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Center of Media and Culture at NYU, and the University of Georgia's Peabody Awards Lamdin Kay Visiting Research Fellowship.
Prof. Monroy earned his bachelors degree in Film Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and his masters degree in Cinema Studies at NYU. He is currently working on his doctorate at NYU, also in Cinema Studies.
Michelle Park
William Rogers
Rhonda Tenenbaum
Richard Vetere
Professor Vetere's feature film screenwriting credits include The Third Miracle, produced by Francis Ford Coppola starring Ed Harris and Anne Heche. He wrote the screenplay adaptation of his own novel published by Simon & Schuster. He wrote the stage adaptation of his play The Marriage Fool and the movie stars Walter Mathau and Carol Burnett. He wrote the stage adapatation of his own play How to Go Out On a Date in Queens starring Jason Alexander and wrote the movie Vigilante. He has worked as Story Editor for network TV series on ABC and CBS, Disney and Touchstone and George Clooney and Warner Brothers. He has eleven published plays with Dramatic Publishing and his play Caravaggio opens Off-Broadway in NYC next October. Prof. Vetere is a Pulitzer nominated and Chicago Humanities guest as a playwright and is currently producing and writing a short film You & Me.
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