You are here: ǻ College of Arts & Sciences Faculty Despina Kakoudaki

Back to top

Despina Kakoudaki Associate Professor and Director, Humanities Lab Literature

Contact
Despina Kakoudaki
(202) 885-2796
CAS | Literature
Battelle-Tompkins 211
<b>Office hours Fall 2020: </b>


Wednesdays 1-4 pm on zoom, and by appointment.
Please email me to set up a time and receive the zoom link
Additional Positions at ǻ
Director, Humanities Lab
Degrees
PhD, Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley


MA, Comparative Literature, University of California at Berkeley


BA, English and American Literature/ Linguistics, University of Athens, Greece

Languages Spoken
Modern Greek, Ancient Greek, Latin, French
Bio
Professor Kakoudaki teaches interdisciplinary courses in literature and film, visual culture, and the history of technology and new media. Her interests include cultural studies, science fiction, apocalyptic narratives, and the representation of race and gender in literature and film.




She completed her doctorate in Comparative Literature at the University of California at Berkeley, and taught at Berkeley and at Harvard University before joining ǻ. She has published articles on robots and cyborgs, race and melodrama in action and disaster films, body transformation and technology in early film, the political role of the pin-up in World War II, and the representation of the archive in postmodern fiction. She has also co-edited a collection of essays on the work of Pedro Almodovar with Brad Epps (University of Minnesota Press, 2009).




Professor Kakoudaki's recent book, titled Anatomy of a Robot: Literature, Cinema, and the Cultural Work of Artificial People, was published by Rutgers University Press in 2014. She received a fellowship from the National Endowment for this project, which traces the history and cultural function of constructed people and animated objects in literature and film.



In 2014 Professor Kakoudaki was appointed Director of the Humanities Lab, a new research initiative at ǻ. Working across departments and schools, the Humanities Lab aims to support and showcase interdisciplinary research and support scholarly collaboration at ǻ and beyond.
See Also
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call ǻ Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Teaching

Fall 2024

  • LIT-146 Critical Appr to Cinema

  • LIT-613 Cultures of Information & Tech

Spring 2025

  • LIT-446 Advanced Studies in Film: Apocalyptic Cinema

Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities

Work In Progress

Recent conference presentations:

  • "Melodrama and Apocalypse:The Melodramatic Mode inContagion."Society for CInema and Media Studies, Chicago, 2017.
  • “Artificial People in The Twilight Zone, 1959-1964.” Society for Cinema and Media Studies, Atlanta, March 2016.
  • “Cinematic Melodrama in the 1960s and 70s.” American Comparative Literature Association. Presenter for Seminar: “Comparative Melodrama” organized by Matthew Buckley, Rutgers University. ACLA Boston, March 2016.
  • “Technology on Stage: Karel Čapek’s R. U. R., Eugene O’Neill’s Dynamo, and the Question of Technology in the 1920s.” Science Fiction Research Association, Stony Brook, June 2015.
  • “Family Melodrama in the 21st Century.” Society for Cinema and Media Studies, Chicago, March 2013. “Language, Race, and Impersonality.” Modern Language Association, MLA Special Session on “Barbara Johnson’s Last Works.” Boston, January 2013.
  • “Fresh New World: Fantasies of Earth and the Aesthetics of Closure in Battlestar Galactica.” Science Fiction Research Association, SFRA Annual Conference, Detroit, June 2012.
  • “War and Meaning: Resisting Closure in The Hurt Locker.” Society for Cinema and Media Studies, Boston, March 2012.
Recent invited lectures:
  • "Robots in Popular Culture," Author Lecture for Escape Velocity Convention, Museum Of Science Fiction,Washington DC. September 2017. Visit:
  • Featured speaker for "Cyborg Futures:Animal Life and SocialRobots Workshop,"Saint Mary's University, Nova Scotia. April 2017.
  • “Robots and Slaves: History, Allegory and the Structural Logic of the Robot Story.” Center for Cultural Studies, University of California at Santa Cruz, May 2014.
  • “Melodrama and Apocalypse: Genre, Politics and The End of the World.” Invited talk for “Screen Melodrama: Global Perspectives,” Columbia University and New York University, February 2013.
  • “At Home and at War: The American Pinup in the 1930s and 40s.” Winthrop University Galleries Exhibition, “Between the Springmaid Sheets.” Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC. October 8, 2012.

Selected Publications

  • Anatomy of a Robot:Literature, Cinema, and the Cultural Work of Artificial People. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2014.

  • A historical and theoretical approach to the discourse of the artificial person from antiquity to the 20th century. Single-authored book-length manuscript, in print.

  • You can see a description of this project on the website.

  • Listen to a short interview I gave about this book on the Kojo Nnamdi Show on .

  • All About Almodóvar: A Passion for Cinema. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009.

  • Co-edited with Professor Bradley S. Epps, Harvard University. A new collection of critical essays on Pedro Almodóvar by international group of scholars. Includes substantial co-authored “Introduction” and single-authored chapter. Edited Book, in print.

  • You can look at the book's description on the website.

Recent article publications:

  • “Melodrama and Apocalypse: The Melodramatic Mode in Contagion.” In Melodrama Unbound. Eds. Christine Gledhill and Linda Williams. Columbia University Press, forthcoming 2018.
  • “Affect and Machines in the Media.” In Handbook of Affective Computing. Eds. Rafael. A. Calvo, Sidney K. D’Mello, Jonathan Gratch, and Arvid Kappas. Oxford University Press, 2014. 110-128.
  • “Representing Politics in Disaster Films.” In International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics, 7:3 (Dec. 2011): 349-356.
  • “World Without Strangers: The Poetics of Coincidence in Pedro Almodóvar’s Talk to Her.” In Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies—68. 23:2 (Sept. 2008): ii-39.