91tv

Jason Mittell
Office
Axinn Center 208
Tel
(802) 443-3435
Email
jmittell@middlebury.edu
Office Hours
Spring 2025: Monday and Thursday 1pm-2pm, and by appointment via https://calendly.com/mittell

Jason Mittell is Professor of Film & Media Culture at Middlebury College. He arrived at Middlebury in 2002 after two years teaching at Georgia State University.

He is the author of , (Routledge, 2004), (Oxford University Press, 2010), (NYU Press, 2015), and  (Bloomsbury, 2017), co-author with Christian Keathley and Catherine Grant of , and the co-editor of (NYU Press, 2013; second edition, 2020). He maintains the blog .

His research interests include television history and criticism, media and cultural history, narrative theory, genre theory, videographic criticism, animation and children’s media, videogames, digital humanities, and new media studies & technological convergence. He is Project Manager for , a journal of videographic criticism, and co-leader of the NEH-sponsored digital humanities workshop “” a two-week intensive workshop focused on producing video-based scholarly criticism since 2015. See his for more details, his for downloadable content, and his for videographic work.

In Fall 2014, Professor Mittell was the founding Faculty Director of Middlebury’s Digital Liberal Arts Initiative, a program funded by the Mellon Foundation to expand the use of digital tools and methods across the curriculum and help faculty innovate in their research and creative work.

In the 2011-12 academic year, he was a visiting fellow at the at the University of Göttingen, Germany, collaborating with colleagues on the .

How to Watch Television book cover
Complex TV cover
Narrative Theory cover
Television and American Culture book cover
Genre and Television book cover

How Black Lives Matter in THE WIRE

A video essay that considers the representations of police brutality against black people as represented in - or erased from - The Wire.

Anatomy of a Relationship: Jesse and Jane

A video essay exploring how Breaking Bad conveys a relationship between characters. Part of “” videographic book project.

Courses Taught

Course Description

Independent Study
Select project advisor prior to registration.

Terms Taught

Spring 2021, Fall 2021, Winter 2022, Spring 2022, Fall 2022, Winter 2023, Spring 2023, Fall 2023, Winter 2024, Spring 2024, Fall 2024, Winter 2025, Spring 2025, Fall 2025, Winter 2026, Spring 2026

Course Description

Senior Work
(Approval required)

Terms Taught

Fall 2023, Fall 2024, Fall 2025

Course Description

Honors Thesis
For students who have completed AMST 0705, and qualify to write two-credit interdisciplinary honors thesis. on some aspect of American culture. The thesis may be completed on a fall/winter schedule or a fall/spring schedule. (Select a thesis advisor prior to registration)

Terms Taught

Winter 2022, Winter 2023, Winter 2024, Winter 2025, Winter 2026

Course Description

Television and American Culture
This course explores American life in the last seven decades through an analysis of our central medium: television. Spanning a history of television from its origins in radio to today’s digital convergence via YouTube and Netflix, we will consider television's role in both representing and constituting American society through a variety of approaches, including: the economics of the television industry, television's role within American democracy, the formal attributes of various television genres, television as a site of gender and racial identity formation, television's role in everyday life, the medium's technological transformations, and television as a site of global cultural exchange. Note to students: this course involves substantial streaming of television for assigned viewing. 3 hrs. lect./disc. / 3 hrs. screen

Terms Taught

Spring 2021, Fall 2021, Spring 2023, Spring 2024, Spring 2025

Requirements

AMR, SOC

Course Description

Faking Reality: Mockumentaries, Hoaxes & Pseudo-docs
The line between fiction and nonfiction media has always been blurred, but the rise of reality TV and digital video in the 21st century has expanded both the quantity and scope of works that straddle these categories. In this course we will explore the history, ethics, cultural impacts, and aesthetic possibilities of mockumentaries, hoax media, and other examples of film and television that challenge easy categorization as “truthful” or fictional. We will study a wide range of works, including F is for Fake, The Blair Witch Project, The Office, Borat, American Vandal, and The Rehearsal. The course will culminate in students either producing their own boundary-blurring media project or authoring a critical essay in written or videographic form. (FMMC 101 or 104) 3 hr. lecture / 3 hr. screening.

Terms Taught

Fall 2024

Course Description

Videographic Film and Media Studies
Digital video technologies now enable film and media critics to “write” with the same materials that constitute their object of study: moving images and sounds. The rise of video essays means rethinking the rhetorical modes traditionally used in critical writing, and incorporating more aesthetic, poetic, and experimental elements alongside explanation and analysis. In this hands-on course (with no previous video editing experience required), we will both study and produce video essays, exploring how such work can produce new knowledge, create an aesthetic impact, and disseminate film & media criticism to a broader audience. (FMMC 0101 or FMMC 0104 or by approval) 3 hrs. sem.

Terms Taught

Spring 2021, Fall 2022, Fall 2024

Course Description

Theories of Popular Culture
This writing-intensive course introduces a range of theoretical approaches to study American popular culture, exploring the intersection between everyday life, mass media, and identity and social power. We will consider key theoretical readings and approaches to studying culture, including ideology and hegemony theory, audience studies, subcultural analysis, the politics of taste, and cultural representations of identity. Using these theoretical tools, we will examine a range of popular media and sites of cultural expression, from television to toys, films to music, to understand popular culture as a site of ongoing political and social struggle. (FMMC 0102 or FMMC 0104 or AMST 0101 or instructor approval) 3 hrs. sem/3 hrs. screen.

Terms Taught

Fall 2023

Requirements

CW, SOC

Course Description

Key Concepts in Film & Media Criticism
This writing-intensive seminar takes a close look at four key theoretical concepts for film & media criticism: textuality, authorship, genre, and narrative. How do we understand the boundaries between any film “text” and its broader intertextual contexts? How does authorship frame our understanding of the style and ethics of any given film? How do genre categories help us make sense of films and media, as well as their cultural contexts? How do films and media tell stories in distinctive and innovative ways? Through theoretical readings and exemplary screenings, we will learn to become sharper critics of films and media. (FMMC 0101 or FMMC 0102 or FMMC 0104 or instructor's approval) 3 hrs. sem./3 hrs. screen

Terms Taught

Fall 2021, Spring 2023

Requirements

CW

Course Description

Advanced Independent work in Film and Media Culture
Consult with a Film and Media Culture faculty member for guidelines.

Terms Taught

Spring 2021, Fall 2021, Winter 2022, Spring 2022, Fall 2022, Winter 2023, Spring 2023, Fall 2023, Winter 2024, Spring 2024, Fall 2024, Winter 2025, Spring 2025, Fall 2025, Winter 2026, Spring 2026

Course Description

Senior Tutorial
All FMMC majors must complete this course in their senior year, during which they undertake the process of devising, researching, and developing the early drafts and materials for an independent project in Film and Media in their choice of medium and format. Students will be poised to produce and complete these projects during Winter Term, via an optional but recommended independent study. Prerequisites for projects in specific formats are outlined on the departmental website.

Terms Taught

Fall 2023

Course Description

Senior Projects
Students may enroll in this project-based independent credit to complete the thesis work started in the fall. Requires faculty approval based on satisfactory progress in the Senior Tutorial. Projects will include a public presentation at the end of Winter or beginning of Spring term.

Terms Taught

Spring 2021, Winter 2024

Course Description

Senior Independent Work
After completing FMMC 0700, seniors may be approved to complete the project they developed during the previous Fall semester by registering for this independent course during the Winter Term, typically supervised by their faculty member from FMMC 0700. Students will complete an independent project in a choice of medium and format, as outlined on the departmental website. This course does not count toward the required number of credits for majors, but is required to be considered for departmental honors. In exceptional cases, students may petition to complete their projects during Spring semester.

Terms Taught

Winter 2022, Winter 2023, Winter 2024, Winter 2025, Winter 2026

Course Description

Watching the Wire: Urban America and Serial Television
Frequently hailed as one of television’s great masterpieces, The Wire shines a light on urban decay in 21st-century America, creating a dramatic portrait of Baltimore’s police, drug trade, and other institutions over five serialized seasons. In this course we will watch and discuss this remarkable—and remarkably entertaining—series twenty years after its debut, placing it within the dual contexts of urban American society and television storytelling. This is a time-intensive course (60 hours of TV!), focused on close viewing, critical analysis of race and policing, and research into The Wire’s social contexts, aesthetic practices, and politics of representation.

Terms Taught

Fall 2022

Requirements

AMR, CW

Academic Degrees

University of Wisconsin – Madison, Department of Communication Arts
     Ph.D., August 2000, Media & Cultural Studies Program
     M.A., Spring 1996, Media & Cultural Studies Program

Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
     B.A. Spring 1992, English and Theater double major

Publications

Books:

, co-edited with Ethan Thompson (New York University Press, 2020; first edition, 2013). Individual contribution of “Better Call Saul: The Prestige Spinoff.”

(Bloomsbury Press, 2017).

(New York University Press, 2015).

(Oxford University Press, 2010).

(Routledge, 2004).

 

Video Essays / Videographic Criticism:

, co-authored with Christian Keathley and Catherine Grant, 2019. Open-access, multimodal site collecting writings about and examples of videographic work.

“,” Digital Humanities Quarterly 15: 1 (March 2021) - multimodal essay.

“,” in Debates in Digital Humanities 2019, edited by Matthew Gold and Lauren Klein (University of Minnesota Press, 2019), 224-42.

“,” 5:1 (Summer 2020) – videographic essay.

“,” Published in NECSUS Journal (May 2019) – videographic essay.

“,” 3.1 (March 2016) – videographic essay.

 

Selected Articles and Chapters:

“How Not to Comprehend Television: Notes on Complexity and Confusion,” in , edited by Steven Willemsen and Miklós Kiss (Berghahn Books, 2022).

“Narrative,” in The Craft of Criticism: Critical Media Studies in Practice, edited by Michael Kackman and Mary Celeste Kearney (Routledge, 2018), 35-46.

“Operational Seriality and the Operation of Seriality,” in The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Narrative Theories, edited by Zara Dinnen and Robyn Warhol (University of Edinburgh Press, 2018), 227-38.

“,” 9:1 (Spring 2013).