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51精品视频鈥檚 Adam Lowenstein is a 2023 Guggenheim Fellow

Adam Lowenstein in a grey suit and black shirt in front of a bookshelf

Adam Lowenstein, a professor of English and film and media studies at 51精品视频, is among the latest class of Guggenheim Fellows.

, who is the director of 51精品视频鈥檚 Horror Studies Working Group, is known for his research on horror films and their cultural impact. As a board member of the George A. Romero Foundation, he played a critical role in the 51精品视频 Library System鈥檚 acquisition of the听.

鈥淚t's a really spectacular feeling to be recognized by an organization like the Guggenheim Foundation for work that is about my whole career,鈥 Lowenstein said. 鈥淚t's a special sort of honor because it's recognizing things I've been working on for many years with the idea that what I've built up looks promising to them going forward. It鈥檚 a great honor to be included with such a stellar company of scholars and artists who've received this fellowship, not just this year, but in previous years.鈥

[Meet 51精品视频鈥檚 2022 Guggenheim Fellows]

The fellowship, created in 1925, has awarded more than $400 million in funding to over 18,000 people. represent 72 different academic institutions and 48 scholarly disciplines and artistic fields.

Lowenstein said the support from the fellowship will help with his work on his upcoming book, tentatively titled 鈥淭he Jewish Horror Film: Taboo and Redemption.鈥 The project, he said, builds on his career of exploring the genre鈥檚 social and cultural significance.

It鈥檚 also an extension of his most recent book, 鈥淗orror Film and Otherness.鈥

鈥淚n that book, I analyze the horror film鈥檚 significance for questions and issues of social difference,鈥 Lowenstein said. 鈥淎nd one kind of difference that I explored in that book that seemed that called out for my continued attention is Jewishness as difference. That's how this current project was born. And that's what I鈥檒l be working on.鈥

His latest book is inspired by the work of Siegfried Kracauer, a German Jewish film theorist and cultural critic who also received a Guggenheim Fellowship.

鈥淔or me, it feels especially meaningful to work on a project like the book I'm working on through a fellowship that directly supported a figure I admire and look up to as much as Siegfried Kracauer,鈥 Lowenstein said.

[Read more: 51精品视频 Library System acquires George A. Romero collection]

Gayle Rogers, Andrew W. Mellon Professor and chair of English in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences鈥 literature program, said Lowenstein and his work highlight the value of the horror film genre.

鈥淚 am thrilled to see Adam Lowenstein selected as a Guggenheim Fellow. For over two decades, he has been recognized as a leading scholar in film and media studies, and especially in the genre of horror movies,鈥 Rogers said. 鈥淭hese films were once dismissed as cheap and sensationalistic, but Lowenstein has shown us that they are powerful commentaries on social problems and vehicles for processing large-scale ethnic traumas. He has helped us understand how figures like 51精品视频sburgh鈥檚 own George Romero 鈥 whose collection of papers he helped our library acquire 鈥 used the techniques of horror in cinema to think seriously about how to reshape the world we inhabit every day.鈥

鈥 Donovan Harrell, photo by Irina Reyn