Denise Mok
Denise Mok is a PhD student in the Cinema Studies program at the University of Toronto. Her research interests include early to Classical cinema, star studies and transnational stardoms; feminist historiography; faciality, celebrity, and modernity; film adaptation; and archiveologies and material ephemera.
Most recently, Denise completed an MA in Film & Media Studies at Columbia University in 2018. She was a researcher on Columbia’s Women Film Pioneers Project and organized the faculty research seminar series, Sites of Cinema. She has led seminars in Early Cinema and the Avant-Garde (Columbia University) and Introduction to Cinema Studies (University of Toronto). Her most recent publication is an article on American actress Marion Davies, titled: “Transcending Categories, Staging Autonomy: Marion Davies’s Transitions from Showgirl to Screen Star and Producer-Manager” (published Fall 2018 in Nineteenth Century Theatre & Film Journal, by SAGE UK). She will also be contributing a chapter on Greta Garbo in Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise, 1931; dir. Robert Z. Leonard) to the forthcoming anthology, Screening #TimesUp: Exploring Rape Culture in Hollywood History.
Selected Work
Forthcoming Publications
- Book Review: The Colour Fantastic: Chromatic Worlds of Silent Cinema, eds. by Giovanna Fossati, Victoria Jackson, Bregt Lameris, Elif Rongen-Kaynakci, Sarah Street, and Joshua Yumibe (2019).
- Book Review: Dark Star: The Biography of Vivien Leigh, by Alan Strachan (2020).
- Book Chapter: “Garbo Caught Between Two Stardoms: Rape and Sexual Display in Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) (1931)." In Screening #TimesUp: Exploring Rape Culture in Hollywood History.
Awards
- 2018 University of Toronto's Faculty of Arts and Sciences Top (FAST) Doctoral Award
- 2016-2017 Columbia Research Fellow - Women Film Pioneers Project
- 2016-2017 Columbia University Faculty of Arts Deans Travel Grant