Jemma Saunders

Jemma Saunders

Department of Film and Creative Writing
Doctoral researcher

Contact details

PhD title: Looking for Birmingham: the Fragmented Audio-Visual City (working title)
SupervisorDr James Walters and Dr Richard Langley
Film Studies with Audio-Visual PhD

Qualifications

  • Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2021)
  • Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2019)
  • MA History, Film and Television (ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, 2011)
  • BA Medieval and Modern History (ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, 2010)

Biography

After completing my MA in 2011, I developed a portfolio career; working in a library, a theatre and at a small film production company in a researcher/coordinator role, in addition to pursuing various freelance writing projects. I returned to the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø to manage the Placement and Training module for the MA in Film and Television: Research and Production (an evolved iteration of my postgraduate degree) and have also undertaken part-time roles in Careers Network. I am studying for my PhD part-time, alongside my work as Placement Co-ordinator for the MA.

Research

I am exploring how Birmingham is represented in popular film and television, interrogating aesthetics of the city in its role as both narrative setting and filming location across a range of texts (including Peaky BlindersDoctors and Man Like Mobeen). Using videographic criticism as a core research methodology, the thesis asks the central question ‘when does Birmingham play itself?’. Comprising both documentary and written components, this research will examine and challenge Birmingham’s on-screen identity.

Other activities

Screenings

  • Hollywood does Sherwood: Reinforced Aesthetics of my Robin Hoods.
  • Audiovisual Essays Programme at Screen Studies Conference (Glasgow, June 2025)
  • ‘Remakes and Memory’ screening event, part of the  research project, at Kommunales Kino im Künstlerhaus (Hannover, Germany, February 2025).
  • Screen Journeys through Birmingham: the City, the Car and the Canal
  • College of Arts & Law Research Festival, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø (June 2025)

Conferences and presentations

  • Silly Geography and the Musical Sequence: Remapping the Birmingham of Take Me HighReal and Imagined Spaces in Film Conference, Universidad de Zaragoza (Spain, May 2025) [presented remotely]
  • Julie Andrews: Voice. ‘Videographic Star Studies’ panel at Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference (Boston USA, March 2024)
  • 'From the Old Ragdoll to the Big Town: (Re)discovering Birmingham after Brum and Rosie & Jim' Audiovisual paper for 6th annual B-Film PGR Symposium (ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, June 2023)
  • Commonwealth Caps. The Phenomenon of the Peaky Blinders event, ESRC Festival of Social Science (Digbeth, Birmingham UK, November 2022)
  • ‘’ Audio-visual paper for 4th annual B-Film PGR Symposium (ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, March 2021)
  • Presented a short video essay for a BAFTSS Practice Research SIG event on Videographic Criticism (January 2021)
  • ‘Gritty City: small screen aesthetics of class, crime and family in the Birmingham of Peaky Blinders and Benefits Street.’ Paper for 2nd annual B-Film PGR Symposium (ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, March 2019)

Further activities

  • Editor at , a journal of videographic form and method (May 2025-present)
  • Shortlisted in the Video Essay category at the 2024 Learning on Screen Awards
  • Co-organiser of the inaugural  (with Nina Jones and Ella Wright), ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, June 2023 and second CPC June 2024.
  • Vimeo: 

Publications

  • Jones, N., Saunders, J. and Wright, E. (2024) '.' Academic Quarter. 28 (September): 48-56. 
  • Saunders, J. (2023) '' Mediapolis: A Journal of Cities and Culture, 8, no. 3 (September).
  • Saunders, J. (2023) ''. Tecmerin Journal of Audiovisual Essays. 11, 1 (June).
  • (Endeavour Press, 2015)
  • (William Collins, 2013)