Nora Alter is an American professor of comparative film and media studies in the School of Theater, Film, and Media Arts at Temple University. She is also the author of "Vietnam Protest Theatre: The Television War on Stage" (1996); "Projecting History: German Nonfiction Cinema, 1967–2000" (2002); and "Chris Marker" (2006).
Background
Nora Alter was born on June 5, 1962, in the United States, into the family of Jean V. and Maria P. Alter. Nora M. Alter was raised in a multi-cultural environment: She is fluent in French, German and English. She has conversational proficiency in Italian and Spanish. She has travelled extensively throughout Europe and Latin America. She has lived in France and Germany for extended periods of time.
Education
Nora M. Alter studied at the University of Pennsylvania, where she received Bachelor of Arts (with honors) in 1984, Master of Arts in 1986, and Doctor of Philosophy in 1991. Moreover, Nora attended Universite de Paris III during 1985 - 1986, and University of Munich in 1987.
Nora M. Alter is a former Chair of Film and Media Arts, the founding director of the Venice Study Away program, and the current Director of FMA Study Away Programs. Prior to joining the Temple faculty in 2009 she was a Research Professor in the Departments of English and German and Affiliate faculty in Jewish Studies, Women and Gender Studies at the University of Florida, Gainesville. Alter received her PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Pennsylvania and is fluent in English, French and German.
She has extensive experience teaching and researching abroad in Paris, Berlin and Venice. In 2005 she was awarded the DAAD Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in German and European Studies. From 2008 - 2010 she was elected the President of Women in German. Alter has been awarded year long research fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Howard Foundation and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
Alter’s teaching and research focus on comparative media studies. She is author of "Vietnam Protest Theatre: The Television War on Stage" (1996), "Projecting History: Non-Fiction German Film" (2002), "Chris Marker" (2006), and "Sound Matters:Essays on the Acoustics of Modern German Culture" (2004). She has published over sixty essays on a broad range of topics including Film and Media Studies, Cultural and Visual Studies, Performance Studies, and Contemporary Art.
Alter has written on artists including John Akomfrah, Daniel Buren, Maria Eichhorn, Stan Douglas, Dan Eisenberg, Renée Green, Hans Haacke, Mathias Poledna, Martha Rosler, and others. She currently serves on the advisory board of the Slought Foundation. Alter's most recent publications include "Essays on the Essay Film", Columbia University Press, 2017 and "The Essay Film After Fact and Fiction", Columbia University Press, 2018. She is currently completing a monograph on Harun Farocki.
Achievements
Nora M. Alter is highly famous for her works "Imperialism and Theatre", "Protest Theatre: The Television War on Stage", "Beyond 1989: Re-Reading German Literature since 1945", and "Triangulated Visions: Women in Recent German Cinema."