Anthony Enns
Associate Professor
Email: anthony.enns@dal.ca
Phone: 902-494-1865
Mailing Address:
PO BOX 15000, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2
- Popular culture
- Cinema & media studies
- Cultural studies
- Critical theory
- History of science and technology
Education
- BA (North Carolina)
- MA, PhD (Iowa)
Anthony Enns is Associate Professor of Contemporary Cultureâan interdisciplinary field that includes literary studies, media studies, and cultural studies. His current research particularly focuses on esoteric media practices and their cultural representations.
Selected Publications
· âAuditory Revelations: Spiritualism, Technology, and Sound,â in Connect and Divide: The Practice Turn in Media Studies, ed. Ulrike Bergermann, Monika Dommann, Erhard SchĂŒttpelz, and Jeremy Stolow (ZĂŒrich: Diaphanes, forthcoming)
· âSatellites and Psychics: The Militarization of Outer and Inner Space,â in Militarizing Outer Space: Astroculture, Dystopia, and the Cold War, ed. Alexander C. T. Geppert, Daniel Brandau, and Tilmann Siebeneichner (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming)
· âPsychic Spies: Cold War Science and the Military-Occult Complex,â in Mediality on Trial: Testing and Contesting Trance and other Media Techniques, ed. Daniel C. Barber and Ehler Voss (MĂŒnchen: De Gruyter, forthcoming)
· âLive Musical Spectaculars: Eventizing Network Television in the Post-Network Age,â in Musicals at the Margins, ed. Martha Shearer and Julie Lobalzo Wright (London: Bloomsbury, forthcoming)
· âVisualizing Thoughts: Photography, Neurology, and Neuroimaging,â in Mind Reading as Cultural Practice, ed. Christian Kassung, Laurens Schlicht, and Carla Seemann (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming)
· âMartian Channels: Imagining Interplanetary Communication at the Dawn of the Radio Age,â Radio Journal 17.2 (2019)
· âInformation Theory of the Soul: Spiritualism, Technology, and Science Fiction,â in Believing in Bits: Digital Media and the Supernatural, ed. Simone Natale and D. W. Pasulka (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019)
· âApocryphal Psychotechnologies,â continent 8.1-2 (2019)
· âParatextuality and the Lost Urtext,â Notre Dame Review 48 (Summer/Fall 2019)
· âSound Photography,â in Photography and Other Media in the Nineteenth Century: Towards an Integrated History, ed. Nicoletta Leonardi and Simone Natale (University Park: Penn State University Press, 2018)
· âSpiritualist Writing Machines: Telegraphy, Typtology, Typewritingâ communication+1 4 (2015)
· ââThe Message is the Materialâ: Coded Bodies and Embodied Codes in Steve Tomasulaâs VAS: An Opera in Flatland,â in Steve Tomasula: The Art and Science of New Media Fiction, ed. David Banash (London: Bloomsbury, 2015)
· âThe Poet of the Pulps: Ray Bradbury and the Struggle for Prestige in Postwar SF,â BelphĂ©gor: LittĂ©rature populaire et culture mĂ©diatique 13.1 (2015)
· âPseudoscience,â Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction, ed. Rob Latham (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014)
· âThe Human Telephone: Physiology, Neurology, and Sound Technologies,â in Sounds of Modern History: Auditory Cultures in the 19th and 20th Century, ed. Daniel Morat (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2014)
· âVibratory Photography,â in Vibratory Modernism, ed. Anthony Enns and Shelley Trower (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)
· âThe Undead Author: Spiritualism, Technology and Authorship,â in The Ashgate Research Companion to Victorian Spiritualism and the Occult, ed. Tatiana Kontou and Sarah Willburn (London: Ashgate, 2012)
· âPost-Reunification Cinema: Horror, Nostalgia, Redemption,â in A Companion to German Cinema, ed. Terri Ginsberg and Andrea Mensch (Oxford: Blackwell, 2012)
· âThe Acoustic Space of Television,â Journal of Sonic Studies 3 (2012)
· âA Sum Over Histories: Faulknerâs Reconfiguration of Space-Time,â in Restoring the Mystery of the Rainbow: Literatureâs Refraction of Science, ed. C. C. Barfoot and Valeria Tinkler-Villani (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2011)
· âThe Horror of Media: Technology and Spirituality in the Ringu Films,â in The Scary Screen: Media Anxiety in The Ring, ed. Kristen Lacefield (London: Ashgate, 2010)
· âThe City as Archive in Jason Lutesâ Berlin,â in Comics and the City: Urban Space in Print, Picture, and Sequence, ed. Jörn Ahrens and Arno Meteling (New York: Continuum, 2010)
· âPsychic Radio: Sound Technologies, Ether Bodies, and Vibrations of the Soul,â The Senses and Society 3.2 (2008)
· âThe Phonographic Body: Phreno-Mesmerism, Brain Mapping, and Embodied Recording,â in Sonic Mediations: Body, Sound, Technology, ed. Carolyn Birdsall and Anthony Enns (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2008)
· âThe Politics of Ostalgie: Post-Socialist Nostalgia in Recent German Film,â Screen 48.4 (2007)
· âMesmerism and the Electric Age: From Poe to Edison,â in Victorian Literary Mesmerism, ed. Martin Willis and Catherine Wynne (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006)
· âMedia, Drugs, and Schizophrenia in the Works of Philip K. Dick,â Science Fiction Studies 33.1 (2006)
· âVoices of the Dead: Transmission/Translation/Transgression,â Culture, Theory and Critique 46.1 (2005)
· âBurroughsâs Writing Machines, in Retaking the Universe: William S. Burroughs in the Age of Globalization, ed. Davis Schneiderman and Philip Walsh (London: Pluto Press, 2004)
· âMediality and Mourning in Stanislaw Lemâs Solaris and His Masterâs Voice,â Science Fiction Studies 29.1 (2002)
· âBuffy the Vampire Disciplinarian: Institutional Excess and the New Economy of Power,â Popular Culture Review 13.2 (2002)
· ââThe Mutated Flowers of Hiroshimaâ: American Reception and Naturalization of Tohoâs Godzilla,â Popular Culture Review 12.2 (2001)
· âDonât Believe the Hype: Rereading Michael Joyceâs Afternoon and Twelve Blue,â Currents in Electronic Literacy 5 (2001)
· âThe Fans from U.N.C.L.E.: Marketing the Swinging Sixties Spy Phenomenon,â Journal of Popular Film and Television 28.3 (2000)
· âThe Spectacle of Disabled Masculinity in John Wooâs âHeroic Bloodshedâ Films,â Quarterly Review of Film and Video 17.2 (2000)
· âThe Creation and Corruption of Diversity in MTVâs The Real World,â Studies in Popular Culture 22.1 (1999)