Professor Emma Widdis
- Professor of Slavonic Studies
Contact
About
Professor Widdis came to film studies via a circuitous route that involved 'traditional' language and literature studies (where she was enthused by the relationship between text and image in 19th and 20th century literature and visual art) and an MPhil in Social and Political Theory (which allowed her to explore the interaction between culture, society and ideology). This combination of influences led to work on early Soviet cinema – and has continued to inflect her research and teaching. She began her PhD in Cambridge, but spent a large part of it as a Visiting Fellow in Harvard University, and then in Moscow. Her first monograph, Visions of a New Land emerged out of this research, and sought to examine Soviet cinema as cultural geography.
Research
Teaching interests:
Professor Widdis teaches 20th century Russian and Soviet literature and culture. She also teach widely on Russian and Soviet cinema (in its full historical range), and in the theory of cinema, with particular focus on film and the city/space, and film and the senses.
Research interests:
In broad terms, Professor Widdis is interested in the relationship between culture and ideology in the early Soviet period. Her research focuses in particular on Russian and Soviet cinema before 1953, and she also works extensively on visual culture, architecture and design, and popular science.
Recent research projects:
In cinema, Professor Widdis focuses on the links between the political avant-garde and mainstream cinema, before the Second World War, and their shared project of constructing models of spectatorship that would correspond to new ideals of subjectivity. How could cinema create new people? Her first book, Visions of a New Land (Yale, 2003), looked at the role played by cinema in shaping a new imaginary geography for the young Soviet Union. Her most recent monograph, Socialist Senses, traces film’s part in the Soviet project for the 'reeducation of the senses'. Other publications emerging from that research include: 'Socialist Senses: Film and the Creation of Soviet Subjectivity', Slavic Review (2012); and 'Making Sense without Speech: Silence in Early Soviet Sound Film', in Sound, Speech, Music in Soviet and Post-Soviet Cinema (Kaganovsky and Salazkina eds, 2014).
Together with Professor Simon Franklin and Professor Rebecca Reich, Emma Widdis is a co-editor of The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature (Cambridge University Press, 2024), for which she also co-wrote the Introduction and a chapter on ’The New Person’. With contributions from thirty-four world-leading scholars, The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature offers a fresh and authoritative approach to literary history, not as one integral narrative but as multiple parallel histories. Each of its four strands tells a story of Russian literature according to a defined criterion: Movements, Mechanisms, Forms, and Heroes. In dialogue, these histories invite a multiplicity of readings, both within and across the narrative strands. In an age of shifting perspectives on Russia, and on national literatures more widely, The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature engages both with traditional literary concerns and with radical re-conceptualisations of Russian history and culture.
Professor Widdis welcomes inquiries from potential MPhil and PhD students with research interests or approaches that are relevant to her own.
Published works:
Books:
- The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature, edited by Simon Franklin, Rebecca Reich and Emma Widdis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024)
- Socialist Senses: Film, Feeling and the Soviet Subject, 1917-1939 (Indiana University Press, 2017)
- Alexander Medvedkin (IB Tauris, 2004)
- (with Simon Franklin) ed., National Identity in Russian Culture (CUP, 2004)
- Visions of a New Land: Soviet Film from the Revolution to the Second World War (Yale University Press, 2003)
Selected articles:
- “The Madman”, in The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature, edited by Simon Franklin, Rebecca Reich and Emma Widdis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024)
- “Introduction”, in The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature, edited by Simon Franklin, Rebecca Reich and Emma Widdis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024)
- Making Sense without Speech: Silence in Early Soviet Sound Film’, in Sound, Speech, Music in Soviet and Post-Soviet Cinema (Kaganovsky and Salazkina eds, Illinois UP, 2014)
- 'Socialist Senses: Film and the Creation of Soviet Subjectivity’, Slavic Review, Vol. 71, No. 3 (2012), pp. 590-618
- Child’s play: pleasure and the Soviet hero in Savchenko’s A Chance Encounter in Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema, Volume 6, Number 3, December 2012, pp. 319-331.
- Faktura: depth and surface in early Soviet set design, Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema, 3: 1.(2009), pp. 5-32.
- Sew Yourself Soviet: The Pleasures of Texture in the Machine Age, in: Petrified Utopia, edited by Evgenii Dobrenko and Marina Balina (Anthem Press, 2009)
- Dressing the Part: Clothing Otherness in Soviet Cinema before 1953, in: Insiders and Outsiders in Russian Cinema, Ed. Stephen Norris and Zara Torlone (Indiana University Press, 2008) [published in Russian as Kostium, predopredelennyi rol'iu: oblachenie ''drugogo'' v sovetskom kinematografe do 1053 goda, Teoriia mody: odezhda, telo, kul'tura, Spring 2007]
- Muratova's Clothes, Muratova's Textures, Muratova's Skin. KinoKultura 8 (April 2005). [Online journal, ISSN 1478-6567]
- Sensational: The Electrified Spaces of Platonov's Screenplays, Essays in Poetics. Andrei Platonov Special Issue Vol. II. Autumn 2002
- The Accordion, in Russian Visual Documents: A Reader, edited by Valerie Kivelson and Joan Neuberger (Yale University Press, 2007)
- Viewed from Below: Subverting the Myths of the Soviet Landscape, in Birgit Beumers. ed., Russia on Reels: Russian Cinema in the 1990s (IB Tauris, 1999), 66-75
Teaching and supervision
Supervisor of:
Stefan Lacny
Pavel Stepanov
Ekaterina Zadirko
Dmitrii Bezuglov
Kirill Goriachok
Aleksandra Bessonova
Course contact for:
SL14: Russian Culture from 1895 to the Death of Stalin
SL7: Soviet and Russian Cinema