
Laura Horak
Director of the Transgender Media Lab and the Transgender Media Portal; Professor of Film Studies
| Degrees: | BA (Yale University), MA and Ph.D. (UC-Berkeley) |
| Email: | laura.horak@carleton.ca |
Bio
Laura Horak is Professor of Film Studies at 杏吧原创 University and director of the Transgender Media Lab听补苍诲听. She investigates the history of transgender and queer film and media in the United States, Canada, and Sweden. She is co-curator of the 99-film Bluray set (Kino Lorber, 2022), author of听(University of California 2026) and (Rutgers 2016). She is co-editor of听(Indiana 2014), (Rutgers 2019), and (Duke 2026), as well as a 2022 “In Focus” section of Journal of Cinema and Media Studies on , and a 2024 issue of Reviews in Digital Humanities on . Horak is a white cis queer settler scholar who is here to leverage her privilege and institutional resources for the revolution.
Read Horak’s newest book!
Cross-appointments and affiliations: Feminist Institute of Social Transformation; Communication and Media Studies; Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art, and Culture; Collaborative Specialization in Digital Humanities; Sexuality Studies
Horak investigates how cinema has helped envision new forms of gender and sexuality, from the early twentieth century to today. With colleagues in the United States and Europe, she is establishing a new field at the intersection of transgender studies and cinema and media studies. Founder of the Transgender Media Lab, she is creating novel digital tools to connect scholarly work with marginalized communities and is bringing forgotten films to the public through international festivals, DVD releases, and streaming platforms.
Horak works in transgender studies, a discipline that centres the lived experiences and theories of transgender, Two-Spirit, nonbinary, intersex, and other gender-nonconforming people. With frequent collaborators C谩el M. Keegan and Eliza Steinbock, she is helping to establish a new subfield: trans cinema and media studies.
Horak publishes regularly on trans filmmaking practices. Her article, 鈥溾 (2014) has been cited in scholarship from a range of disciplines, in English, German, Swedish, Spanish, French, and Brazilian Portuguese. She argues that trans YouTube videos succeed because their formal strategies exploit the platform鈥檚 penchant for the personal and the spectacular.
Laura Horak answers the question:
Based on archival research in Toronto, Victoria, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, Horak has published on and the political, cultural, and aesthetic work of . She is currently writing a book analyzing trans filmmaking in North America from the 1990s to today, Trans Cinema: An Introduction. She is also bringing attention to the works of trans filmmakers in Canadian film heritage as a collaborator on Janine Marchessault鈥檚 SSHRC Partnership Grant and as an associate member of Susan Lord鈥檚 CFI-funded .
Horak is building the field of trans cinema and media studies through a series of federally and provincially funded grants 鈥 a SSHRC Insight Development Grant (2017-2019), a SSHRC Insight Grant (2020-2025), and an Ontario Early Researcher Award (2019-2024). With this support, she has founded the Transgender Media Lab, a virtual and physical space for students and scholars working at the intersections of trans studies and media studies.
Working from the framework of intersectional feminist digital humanities, Horak is creating new digital tools to connect her scholarship with diverse trans communities. A key project of the Transgender Media Lab is the , a website that highlights the innovative work of trans filmmakers over the past half-century. The Portal enables new ways of analyzing trans film production and distribution and shares information with educators, students, festival programmers, artists, activists, and the public.
In addition to her work on trans-made cinema, Horak explores feminist, queer, and trans lessons of early twentieth-century cinema in the United States and Sweden and brings long-forgotten silent films to international publics. Horak鈥檚 monograph, , uses archival research to overturn long-standing assumptions about gender and sexuality in American film history, and reveals the fascination of early audiences with varied forms of female masculinity. Chosen by Huffington Post as one of the Best Film Books of 2016, it was also a 2016 Choice Outstanding Academic Title and a finalist for the 2016 Richard Wall Memorial Award by the Theatre Library Association in the US, and was longlisted for the 2016 Kraszna-Krausz Best Moving Image Book in the UK. Moreover, it has been cited in books and articles from a range of disciplines, in English, German, Swedish, Czech, and Spanish. Horak is writing a monograph titled Cinema鈥檚 Oscar Wilde (Rutgers UP) that demonstrates how cinema participated in the Swedish project of modernizing sexuality in the 1910s and 1920s via a case study of the gay, Jewish, Finnish-Swedish director Mauritz Stiller.
Horak brings the
results of her research to the public by programming feminist, queer, and trans silent films at film听festivals in Italy, Sweden, and the United States. Through a SSHRC Partnership Development Grant (2020-2023) titled , she collaborated with eleven film archives across Europe and North America, , , and the , to make 99 silent films featuring cross-dressing women and women comedians publicly available for the first time. The New York Times called the project a and
Horak鈥檚 research demonstrates the key role of cinema in shaping the possibilities of gender and sexuality in our lives. Her scholarship is defined by international and interdisciplinary collaborations and, like cinema itself, her work brings people together across disciplines, national boundaries, and the academia/public divide to consider anew how media can reveal unexpected possibilities for more liberating ways of living our identities.
Videos
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Selected Publications
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University of California Press, 2026.
By Linda Williams. Edited by Christine Gledhill, Laura Horak, and Elisabeth R. Anker. Duke University Press, 2026.
Co-written with Evie Johnny Ruddy. In The Companion to Digital Humanities in Practice, edited by Constance Crompton, Laura Estill, Richard J. Lane, and Ray Siemens. Routledge, 2025.
Reviews in Digital Humanities 5, no. 7 (July 2024). Co-edited with Constance Crompton.
Co-written with Constance Crompton. Reviews in Digital Humanities 5, no. 7 (July 2024).
Feminist Media Histories 10, no. 2-3 (Spring-Summer 2024). Co-edited with Maggie Hennefeld. 320 pp.
Co-written with Maggie Hennefeld. Feminist Media Histories 10 (2-3), 1-9.
A Roundtable with Neta Alexander, Kaveh Askari, Ren茅e C. Baker, Jennifer Bean, Liza Black, Enrique Moreno Ceballos, Maggie Hennefeld, Laura Horak, Dana Reason, Elif Rongen-Kaynak莽i, Kate Saccone, Aurore Spiers, Gonca Feride Varol, Yiman Wang, and Bret Wood.鈥 Co-conducted with Maggie Hennefeld and Rachel Loewen. Feminist Media Histories 10 (2-3), 114-125.
For Oxford Handbook of Silent Cinema, edited by Rob King and Charlie Keil, 684-713. Oxford: Oxford University Press, February 2024. 29 pp.
NECSUS: European Journal of Media Studies, June 7, 2023.
Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 61, no. 2 (Winter 2022). Co-edited with C谩el M. Keegan. 49 pp.
In The Oxford Companion to Queer Cinema, edited by Ronald Gregg and Amy Villarejo, 511-540. Oxford: Oxford University Press, November 2021. 29 pp.
鈥#WeAreTheGlobalCluster: Affectivity, Resistance, and Sense8 Fandom,鈥 co-written with Rox Samer. In Sense8: Transcending Television, edited by Deborah Shaw and Rob Stone, 197-218. London: Bloomsbury Press, May 2021. 21 pp.
Feminist Media Histories 7, no. 1 (Winter 2021): 21-29.
Transgender Studies Quarterly 7, no. 2 (Spring 2020): 274-287.
听滨苍听The Power of Vulnerability: Mobilizing Affect in Feminist, Queer and Anti-Racist Media Cultures, edited by Anu Koivunen, Katariina Kyr枚l盲 and Ingrid Ryberg, 95-115. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 21 pp. (open access)
听Special issue on听.听Feminist Media Histories听4, no. 2 (April 2018): 201-206. 5pp.
.听Somatechnics听8, no. 1 (March 2018). Co-edited with C谩el M. Keegan and Eliza Steinbock. 142 pp.
听Introduction to special issue on Cinematic Bodies.听Somatechnics听8, no. 1 (March 1, 2018): 1鈥13. Co-written with C谩el M. Keegan and Eliza Steinbock. 14pp.
听滨苍听A Companion to D.W. Griffith, edited by Charlie Keil, 284鈥308. Wiley Blackwell Companions to Film Directors. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, 2018. 25pp.
听Special issue on Transgender Media.听Spectator: The University of Southern California Journal of Film and Television Criticism37, no. 2 (Fall 2017): 9-20. 11 pp.
听Co-written with Roxanne Samer. With Moya Bailey, micha c谩rdenas, Lokeilani Kaimana, C谩el M. Keegan, Geneveive Newman, Roxanne Samer, and Raffi Sarkissian. Special issue on Transgender Media.听Spectator: The University of Southern California Journal of Film and Television Criticism听37, no. 2 (Fall 2017): 74-88.
Co-written with Maggie Hennefeld. Ms. Magazine Blog. October 25, 2017.
听European Journal of Scandinavian Studies听47, no. 2 (2017): 377-397. 21pp.
听滨苍听The Arclight Guide to Media History and the Digital Humanities, edited by Charles Acland and Eric Hoyt, 65-102. Falmer: REFRAME/Project Arclight (2016). 38 pp.
听Special issue on Trans Cultural Production.听TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly听1, no. 4 (December 2014): 572-585. 14 pp.
听Journal of Scandinavian Cinema听4, no. 3 (September 2014): 193-208. 16 pp.
.听Co-edited with Jennifer Bean and Anupama Kapse. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2014. 360 pp.
听Camera Obscura听25, no. 2 74 (2010): 75-117. 42 pp.