Regina Mosch is an Assistant Lecturer within the Media, Communication and Performing Arts division.
- Overview
- Research Interests
- Research Publications
- Teaching & Learning
- Activities & Awards
Regina Mosch is a filmmaker, curator and assistant lecturer. Her filmmaking is often experimental, in dialogue with spaces and other media, and can be found in installations, cinemas or on Super8 cassettes.
Her research revolves around trauma, queerness and film phenomenology. The affective resonances between spectator and film bodies as well as bodies of theory drive her thinking.
Regina鈥檚 arts-based PhD explored how the subtle, fleeting yet pervasive nature of microaggressions affects queer bodies. The co-creative film art exhibition 'over/exposed', assembled with a group of queer creatives from Edinburgh and Glasgow, was both an outcome and methodology of the PhD.
Regina has made and shown films in Germany, Scotland, New York, Iceland, India, Ireland and Switzerland. For five years, she also co-directed the Copenhagen Web Fest, a film festival for digital series and new media, and worked for the global network Women in Film & Television as a Programme Producer.
Regina is a regular speaker on topics such as gender equality and anti-racism at European film festivals such as European Film Market at Berlinale, Tallinn Black Nights and Gothenburg Film Festival.
Affiliations (including memberships) to other organisations:
BAFTSS (British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies)
Regina is an early career researcher and currently developing her arts-based research practice. She uses film, video art and documentary methodologies to do philosophy and contribute to the growing body of research on queer film phenomenology, affect, co-creation and trauma.
Active Research Interests:
- Film phenomenology
- Filmmaking: experimental and documentary
- Queer Methodologies
- Affect
- Modernity
- Trauma Studies
- Gender Studies
Research Methods:
- Arts-based methods
- Textual analysis
- Affective analysis
Regina teaches on a number of undergraduate modules in film and media, both practical and film-theoretical.