
Sue Lovell
Dr Sue Lovell teaches into Ethics, Literature and Academic Writing courses at Griffith University (Queensland, Australia) in the School of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences. Her research interests include narrative theory, embodiment, affect and performativity in narratives, specifically in the field of critical posthumanism. She is particularly interested in developing and understanding posthuman narratives in terms of subjectivity and identity.
less
Related Authors
David Seamon
Kansas State University
Giulia Sissa
Ucla
Derrick de Kerckhove
University of Toronto
Kevin LaGrandeur
New York Institute of Technology
Michael Shanks
Stanford University
Josef Barla
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Lucy English
Bath Spa University
Jan Blommaert
Tilburg University
Adolfo Vasquez Rocca
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Viacheslav Kuleshov
Stockholm University
Uploads
Papers by Sue Lovell
Keywords: agency, affect, performativity, improvised performance, embodiment
Dr Sue Lovell
Sue Lovell teaches ethics, gender, Australian literature and academic writing at the School of Humanities, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia. She supervises at all levels where candidates are interested in identity issues. She has published within Australia and internationally on the Australian visual artist Vida Lahey exploring the artist’s life, ouvre and the ways in which biographical narrative relates to the past and subjectivity. She is increasingly interested in narratives broadly, as well as the embodied and cognitive aspects of engagement with narratives. It is this aspect that has led to her interest in affect and agency.
Dr Teone Reinthal
Teone Reinthal has published in Paris and in Australia on inter-disciplinary relations between creativity and constructions of identity, experimental methods in film and theatre, collaborative creative discourse and art as social action. These interests have emerged from her role as a filmmaker working in partnership with culturally diverse communities. Exploring practice-led studio methods and approaches used in creative community development, her research describes how problem-solving strategies and internal resources that she names collectively as Adaptivism have shaped her studio methods. Teone is currently an adjunct research fellow in the School of Humanities, Griffith University, where she is also engaged as a sessional tutor and student success coach for the Learning Futures Department.
Keywords: agency, affect, performativity, improvised performance, embodiment
Dr Sue Lovell
Sue Lovell teaches ethics, gender, Australian literature and academic writing at the School of Humanities, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia. She supervises at all levels where candidates are interested in identity issues. She has published within Australia and internationally on the Australian visual artist Vida Lahey exploring the artist’s life, ouvre and the ways in which biographical narrative relates to the past and subjectivity. She is increasingly interested in narratives broadly, as well as the embodied and cognitive aspects of engagement with narratives. It is this aspect that has led to her interest in affect and agency.
Dr Teone Reinthal
Teone Reinthal has published in Paris and in Australia on inter-disciplinary relations between creativity and constructions of identity, experimental methods in film and theatre, collaborative creative discourse and art as social action. These interests have emerged from her role as a filmmaker working in partnership with culturally diverse communities. Exploring practice-led studio methods and approaches used in creative community development, her research describes how problem-solving strategies and internal resources that she names collectively as Adaptivism have shaped her studio methods. Teone is currently an adjunct research fellow in the School of Humanities, Griffith University, where she is also engaged as a sessional tutor and student success coach for the Learning Futures Department.