Dr Sadie Wearing

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About
Sadie Wearing is Associate Professor in Gender Theory, Culture and Film in the Department of Gender Studies, which she joined in 2004, having previously studied and worked at in the Department of English at Queen Mary College, University of London, where she obtained her PhD and Masters degree, and the University of East Anglia in the department of Film and Television Studies, where she held a lecturer post. Her research and teaching interests are in the critical, gendered, analysis of film, literature and popular culture. Her work examines the ways in which cinema, literature and popular culture both reflects and contests wider cultural dynamics. Her research covers historical and contemporary contexts exploring the ways in which literary and cinematic narratives articulate contested cultural processes including questions of gender, sexuality, public and private memory, national identity, heritage and belongings, and aging. A key strand of her work has explored how aging is figured in contemporary culture and with what effects. Drawing on a range of genres she has explored how meanings are attached to dementia and how a range of aging subjectivities are managed and articulated. Her newest book Jill Craigie: Film and Feminism in Post-war Britain, co-authored with Yvonne Tasker, is forthcoming with University of Illinois Press.
Member of the PhD Supervisory team of Yihan Wei.
With Leticia Sabsay and Sumi Madhok, she edits the book series ‘Thinking Gender in Transnational Times’ for Palgrave Macmillan
Expertise
gender and feminist theory; representation; feminist film theory and history; aging and subjectivity in literature; culture and film
Research
Current Areas of Research
Much of Sadie's research and teaching centres on the analysis of film. Specifically, the ways in which cinematic narratives articulate contested cultural processes including questions of public memory, national identity, heritage and belongings, gender sexuality and aging. She has written on the questions raised by adaptations of literary and biographical texts and the specificity of cinematic forms of memory and forgetting and at how these might be understood in relation to the politics of feeling, tone, postcolonial theory, postfeminism and contemporary formations of celebrity. Her current research has two main strands, a research project on the filmmaker Jill Craigie, and a longstanding research interest in representations of aging.
Jill Craigie, Film and Feminism in Post-War Britain
Jill Craigie Film Pioneer (https://www.jillcraigiefilmpioneer.org/) is a four year(2018-2022) research project funded by the AHRC. The investigators on the Project are Lizzie Thynne (PI, University of Sussex)), Yvonne Tasker (CI, University of Leeds) and Sadie Wearing(CI LSE). Jill Craigie (1911 – 1999) was one of Britain’s earliest women documentary makers whose films stand out because of their overtly feminist and socialist politics, and their attempt to combine activism and entertainment. Located within women’s film history, the project aims to explore Craigie as a significant force in British cinema history whose films warrant closer attention. Forthcoming work from the project includes a book, Jill Craigie: Film and feminism in Postwar Britain (co-authored with Yvonne Tasker)which seeks to centralize Craigie’s film work, locating it for the reader within the particular context of British wartime and postwar visual culture and society. We trace the links between the themes and political tones of her films and her preoccupations with equality, housing, feminist histories, art, culture and socialism through her varied work in the culture industries in the 1940s, 1950s and beyond.
Aging in Contemporary Culture
This research, which has been published across a range of journals and edited collections, is concerned with representations and theorisations of the aging body in contemporary popular culture exploring the intersections of discourses of race, class, disability, gender and sexuality in shifting conceptualisations of age. The research examines the ways in which film, literature and media reflect and complicate wider cultural assumptions about aging, memory and temporality and the ways in which aging subjectivities are produced and reproduced via cultural discourses and the affective management of aging. This work explores links with affect theory, postfeminism, performativity, celebrity and disability studies to reflect on the complexity and paradoxes of prevailing representations of aging and suggests the ways in which recent popular culture might be understood as a crucial site on which negotiations of contemporary aging are being explored. Particular attention is paid to the emotional register of representations of dementia across a range of genres. Forthcoming work includes analysis of the role of genre in some of the most recent high profile feature films screened in the context of the covid-19 pandemic.
Publications
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