Master Class: Writing Criticism with A.S. Hamrah
Ekstrom Library, South 3rd Street, Louisville, KY, USA
Overview
The UofL Creative Writing Program's Axton Series brings you a Master Class with A.S. Hamrah: A public master class on criticism as a literary and analytical practice, focusing on close reading, judgment, and the responsibilities of cultural commentary.
Escape from End Times Cinema
In the age of streaming, when many films areย watchedย at home instead ofย seenย in movie theaters, what does it mean to write film criticism? It is a clichรฉ to remind readers that film is a visual medium. Yet serious attention to cinemaย asย a visual art is increasingly lost amid new modes of consumption. These modes downplay the image itself and instead reward forms of criticism that flatten films into plot summary, career context for actors and directors, or perfunctory readings of studio-sanctioned politics. At the same time, the rise of social media has emphasized takes over prose writing, leading to an unreflective, one-and-done approach.ย Hamrahย will explore these shifts and their consequences for how we watch, think about, and write about movies.
Please come prepared to write about a film: Hamrah suggests you watch a movie in the theater (ideally) a day or two before the master class so that its details are fresh in your mind.
Amenities
What to Expect
Date: Fri, Feb 27th
Time: 10:00am - 12:00pm EST
Price: FREE
About A. S. Hamrah
National Book Critics Circle Award nominee A. S. Hamrah is an American film critic and the author ofย The Earth Dies Streaming,ย Last Week at End Times Cinema, andย Algorithms of the Night. His criticism has appeared inย n+1,ย The New York Review of Books,ย Bookforum,ย The Nation,ย Harperโs, the Criterion Collection,ย Screen Slate, and other publications.
Hamrah writes with sharp, unsentimental clarity, blending political critique, aesthetic analysis, and a deadpan, often dark humor. He treats films not as isolated works but as cultural artifacts shaped by economic and historical forces, exposing the ideologies embedded in popular images. Beneath the dryness and wit is a moral seriousness: the belief that looking closely at images is a civic responsibility.
Where you will be
Ekstrom Library (Room W104)
Phone
Master Class: Writing Criticism with A.S. Hamrah