
Emily Hiltz
Associate Professor, Teaching Stream (On Sabbatical until July 1 2026)
| Building: | Richcraft Hall, Room 4212 |
| Department: |
Biography
Emily Hiltz is an Associate Professor, Teaching Stream in the Communication and Media Studies program. Her teaching and research focus on advancing creative, interdisciplinary and critical approaches to visual media culture, identity, gender and sexuality, and online communication. Her research contributes to visual culture studies, feminist intersectional media studies, and critical media approaches to crime and criminalization. She holds a PhD in Communication from 杏吧原创 University, a MA in Media Studies from The University of Western Ontario, and an Honours BA in Media, Information and Technoculture also from Western.
Research Interests
My research explores varied visual media practices tied to notoriety construction in North American popular culture. Looking to familiar images of criminalized and victimized subjects, I consider how notoriety emerges through the transmediated use of photographic and artistic images. For example, I am currently investigating the legal, journalistic, and social conventions tied to courtroom art production in Canada 鈥 and in particular, how drawn likenesses of accused criminals are created and used in news reporting. A secondary, ongoing project considers the commercial function of crime in a postfeminist, 鈥榯rue crime鈥 media culture. My co-authored research published in the Journal of Gender Studies and TOPIA offers critiques of other visual materials circulating online (e.g., anti- and pro-vaccination memes) and in colonial texts and policies (e.g., through Indian Residential School reports and photography). Questions of method, knowledge production and affect are central to all my research endeavours, which also directly informs my teaching practice.
Teaching Experience and Supervision
I regularly teach research-focused classes, such as 鈥業ntroduction to Communication Research鈥 (COMS 2004), 鈥楺ualitative Research in Communication鈥 (COMS 3002) and 鈥楶rofessional Communication Research鈥 (COMS 4507), and I teach specialized undergraduate elective courses like 鈥楳edia and Crime鈥 (COMS 3003), 鈥楪ender, Sexuality and Media鈥 (COMS 4604), and 鈥楪ender, Sexuality, Culture鈥 (COMS 5509) at the graduate level. Overall, my pedagogical approach is student-centred, experiential, and oriented around skills development.
In 2022, I was awarded the Faculty of Public Affairs鈥 Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of my commitment to student satisfaction, engagement and support, along with curriculum development.
With the support of a Scholarship in Teaching and Learning grant, I am conducting research on co-op students鈥 perspectives on the learning outcomes of the program, and at a broader level, developing a systematic process for consulting students as part of program review and curriculum development.
I also supervise undergraduate and graduate students on a wide range of projects and topics, such as: age and gendered practices on Instagram, postfeminist pop culture, decolonial news and art, and gaming culture and geek masculinity. I regularly work with undergraduate students through the Students as Partners Program and mentor graduate Research Assistants with hands-on research training. I welcome expressions of interest re: supervision from MA Communication students who are pursuing Major Research Essays.
Publications
Robinson, S., & Hiltz, E. (2024). Platformed misogyny in Depp v Heard: #justiceforjohnny and networked defamation. Feminist Media Studies, 24:1, 162-165. DOI:
Brady, M. J., Christiansen, E., & Hiltz, E. (2022). Good Karen, Bad Karen: visual culture and the anti-vaxx mom on Reddit, Journal of Gender Studies. DOI:
Brady, M., & Hiltz, E. (2017). The archaeology of an image: The persistent persuasion of Thomas Moore Keesick鈥檚 residential school photographs. TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies. DOI: 37(Spring), 61-85. DOI:
Select Conference Presentations
鈥淲eaponizing defamation: Harms, hate, and platformed misogyny in Depp v Heard.鈥 Console-ing Passions 2023, Calgary AB, June 23, 2024. Presented with Sandra Robinson.
Finding 鈥楰aren鈥: Tracking the Good and Bad 鈥楢nti-Vaxx鈥 Mom on Reddit.鈥 Canadian Communication Association Annual Conference. Panel: Grappling with feminisms in our methodologies. June 4, 2021.
鈥淭he violence of smiles through the Black Dahlia image: Cultural remediations of Elizabeth
Short鈥檚 victim photographs.鈥 Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities. Fairmont Chateau Laurier, Ottawa. March 23, 2019.
鈥淣otoriety as postfeminist sensibility.鈥 Histories / theories / archaeologies / archives: 40 years of communication and media research. Panel: Histories. 杏吧原创 University, Ottawa. Sept. 14, 2018.
鈥淭he visual construction of criminal notoriety: Discourse analysis as an historical critique of violent women鈥檚 notoriety.鈥 Paris 2017, The International Association for Media and History (IAMHIST) 鈥 Media and History: Crime, Violence and Justice. Paris, France. July 10-13, 2017.