Kyle Barrowman
College of CommunicationCommunication StudiesMedia and Cinema StudiesAdjunct FacultyFacultyPart Time
DegreesPhD (Cardiff University)
Contact
BIO
Kyle Barrowman received his PhD from Cardiff University, his MA from the University of Chicago and his BA from Columbia College Chicago (where he also teaches). His research interests include film studies (particularly genre theory, authorship, and aesthetics), philosophy (particularly the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein, J.L. Austin, and Stanley Cavell) and martial arts (particularly the genre of martial arts cinema and the sport of MMA).
Recent Publications
- Books (Edited)
- ReFocus: The Films of Kon Ichikawa (Edinburgh University Press, forthcoming).
- Fighting Stars: Stardom and Reception in Hong Kong Martial Arts Cinema (Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
Book Chapters (Authored)- "Descendant of the Dragon: Stephen Chow, Postmodernism, and the Legacy of Bruce Lee," in The Cinema of Stephen Chow (Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
- "Michelle Yeoh: Combating Gender," in Fighting Stars: Stardom and Reception in Hong Kong Martial Arts Cinema (Bloomsbury, forthcoming)
- "More than Meets the Eye: Perspectives on William Wyler and the Auteur Theory," ReFocus: The Films of William Wyler.
- "Origins of the Action Film: Types, Tropes, and Techniques in Early Film History," A Companion to the Action Film.
Journal Issues (Edited)- "Bruce Lee's Media Legacies," Global Media and China 4.3.
- "Bruce Lee's Martial Legacies," Martial Arts Studies 8.
Journal Articles (Authored)- "Reconsidering Remarriage: Stanley Cavell and the Vicissitudes of Genre," New Review of Film and Television Studies.
- "Illustrating Isolation: Visual Strategies in the Films of Kon Ichikawa," Asian Cinema 34.1.
- "Pulp Nonfiction: Quentin Tarantino’s Cinema Speculation," Bright Lights Film Journal.
- "Alfred Hitchcock and the Moving Camera: Authorship, Style, and Declarative Aesthetics," Offscreen 27.1-2.
- "Béla Tarr and the Moving Camera: Slow Noir in Damnation and The Man from London," Studies in European Cinema.
- "The Availability of Jim Jarmusch's Film-Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Derrida, and Private Language in Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai," Film-Philosophy 26.3.
- "A Pitch of Polemics: Stanley Cavell and the Sound(s) of Scholarship," New Review of Film and Television Studies Blog.
- "How to Do Things with Camera Movement," Senses of Cinema 101.
- "A Plea for Intention: Stanley Cavell and Ordinary Aesthetic Philosophy," Movie: A Journal of Film Criticism 9.
Research Output: depaul.academia.edu/KyleBarrowman