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Canadian academic and film critic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Waugh is a Canadian critic, lecturer, author, actor, and activist,[1][2][3] best known for his extensive work on documentary film and eroticism in the history of LGBT cinema and art.[4] A professor emeritus at Concordia University,[5] he taught 41 years in the film studies program of the School of Cinema and held a research chair in documentary film and sexual representation. He was also the director of the Concordia HIV/AIDS Project, 1993-2017, a program providing a platform for research and conversations involving HIV/AIDS in the Montréal area.[6]
Thomas Waugh | |
---|---|
Born | 1948 (age 75–76) London, Ontario, Canada |
Occupation | Academic, Author, Critic, Programmer, Activist |
Period | 1970s-present |
Notable works | Show Us Life: Towards a History and Aesthetics of the Committed Documentary Hard to Imagine: Gay Male Eroticism in Photography and Film from Their Beginnings to Stonewall |
A graduate of Columbia University, Waugh wrote film criticism and history articles for publications such as Jump Cut and The Body Politic before publishing his first book, Show Us Life: Towards a History and Aesthetics of the Committed Documentary, in 1984.
His 1996 book, Hard to Imagine: Gay Male Eroticism in Photography and Film from Their Beginnings to Stonewall, took 13 years to research and write.[7] Its release was delayed eight full months after its initial planned publication date, due to difficulty finding a printer willing to handle the book's sexually explicit homoerotic imagery.[8]
He is a two-time Lambda Literary Award nominee, garnering nominations in the Visual Arts category at the 15th Lambda Literary Awards in 2003 for Out/Lines: Underground Gay Graphics From Before Stonewall,[9] and at the 17th Lambda Literary Awards in 2005 for Lust Unearthed: Vintage Gay Graphics from the DuBek Collection.[10] He is also the recipient of the SCMS (Society for Cinema and Media Studies) Katherine Singer Kovács Book Award for The Conscience of Cinema: The Work of Joris Ivens, 1912-1989.
Waugh has also served on the board of Cinema Politica,[11] has been active with the Quebec Gay Archives,[12] and is coeditor with Matthew Hays of the Queer Film Classics series of 19 monographs on LGBT film, published by Arsenal Pulp Press.[13] In 2013 Waugh, Ryan Conrad and Cinema Politica raised funds on Indiegogo to produce and distribute a documentary film about the Russian LGBT organization Children-404.[14]
In 2010, Waugh and filmmaker Kim Simard launched the Queer Media Database Canada-Québec, an online database project to collect and publish information about LGBT films and videos made in Canada and the personalities involved in their creation.[15] The project was based in part on his 2006 book The Romance of Transgression in Canada: Queering Sexualities, Nations, Cinemas.
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