In the Dyson College of Arts and Sciences, hands-on learning isn’t reserved solely for the science labs and art studios. ’s experiential approach to the humanities builds on the University’s long-standing commitment to undergraduate research and civic engagement.
Emilie Zaslow
Department Chairperson
Biography
Faculty Bio
My research focuses on the connection between identity and mediated communication. I am interested in the ways in which we come to understand ourselves, and our worlds, through our relationships with media texts and technologies. Specifically, my research has explored how media impacts gendered identities and our perceptions of the feminine.
For more information see: emiliezaslow.com
Awards and Honors
- 2014, Kenan Faculty Development Grant
- , 2014, Scholarly Research Award
- Verizon Thinkfinity Initiative Grant, 2013, Developing an Interdisciplinary Digital Media Studies Minor and a Digital Cinema and Television Production Course
- 2012, Pawscar for Best Professor
Education
PhD, New York University, New York, NY, 2006
Media, Culture, and Communication
MA, SUNY at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, 1997
American Studies
BA, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH, 1993
Women's Studies
Research and Creative Works
Research Interest
Gender identity and media
Parenting communities online
Courses Taught
Past Courses
CMS 113: Media, Culture, and Society
CMS 235: Advertising & Consumer Culture
CMS 309: Girls' Media Stdy:Thry & Rsrch
CMS 335: Media and Gender
CMS 393: Internship Program I
CMS 394: Internship Program II
COM 113: Media, Culture, and Society
COM 119: Organizational Communication
COM 200: Public Speaking
COM 210: Intro. to Mass Media - A.D.P.
COM 235: Advertising & Consumer Culture
COM 244: Digital Cultures
COM 245: Commctn and Popular Culture
COM 297: Advertising & Consumer Culture
COM 297: Topic: Conflictr Management
COM 297: Topic: Media and Gender
COM 297: Topic:Digital Culture
COM 297: Youth, Media and Democracy
COM 312: Intro to Cultural Studies
COM 335: Media and Gender
COM 336: Propaganda
COM 393: Intern Program I
COM 393: Internship Program I
COM 393: Internship Program l
COM 394: Internship Program II
COM 395: Independent Study in Comm.
COM 397: Girls' Media Stdy:Thry & Rsrch
COM 499: Seminar in Communications
COS 113: Media, Culture, and Society
COS 296: Topic: Current Media in NY
COS 335: Media and Gender
COS 393: Internship Program l
COS 394: Internship Program II
DMS 393: Intern in Digital Media Stds
INT 296: Children in Urban Society
INT 299: Disability Stories thru Film
INT 299: Disability Stories Thru Film
INT 299: Narrative Medicine
SPE 203: Persuasive Speaking
UNV 101: First-Year Smnr Unvrsty Cmmnty
Publications and Presentations
Publications
#iammorethanadistraction:
Connecting local body politics to a digital feminist movement
Zaslow, E. & , . Jessalyn Keller and Maureen Ryan (Eds.), New York, NY :Routledge.
GFCF: Food, Autism, and Challenges to Scientific Motherhood and Neoliberalism
Zaslow, E. Florence Pasche Guignard and Tanya Cassidy (Eds.), Branford, Ontario , Canada:Demeter Press. , pages 17 pgs. .
Related News and Stories
Dyson Professor Emilie Zaslow, an expert in American Girl, talks about how the famed doll company is facing a backlash while promoting inclusion in an article published by The MinnPost.
American Girl built itself around themes like history, girlhood, initiative and innocence. The characters’ wholesome image — combined with expensive dolls that are designed and marketed as something to be explicitly cared for — means that the brand is also one that is “appreciated by more conservative families,” said Emilie Zaslow, a professor and chair of communication and media studies at and the author of “Playing with America’s Doll: A Cultural Analysis of the American Girl Collection.”
Nostalgia for American Girl Dolls is no joke. But what happens when the first-ever boy doll is introduced to one of the most iconic girl power brands? Emilie Zaslow, PhD, professor and department chair of communication studies at , teamed up with Jaclyn Griffith ’17 to find out.