Susan Z. Swan
After 30 years as a university professor, Susan Z. Swan turned to freelance writing and editing full time, following a dream decades old to be able to work with words without the angst of grading.
She has a doctorate of philosophy in Rhetoric and Communication Theory from Ohio State University, a master’s in Communication Studies (also from Ohio State), and a bachelor’s in English literature and Education from Duke University. Susan has received a number of teaching awards, including ones from the Central States Communication Association and the University of South Dakota, as well as a faculty-of-the-year award from Zayed University in the United Arab Emirates. She has taught widely in the humanities and the social sciences, including a 48-credit full-year course in world classics. She has taught almost 80 different content courses, from public speaking and interpersonal communication to advertising principles and film criticism.
Susan has significant community organizing experience, including being a founding member (and then president and chair of the board of trustees) of an historical society in Springboro, Ohio. One of her proudest moments came when the 1878 Eastlake house and farmstead she restored in Ohio was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. Originally from the mountains of North Carolina, Susan has traveled widely (and mostly on the cheap) – she’s visited 41 of the 50 states of the U.S. and much of Europe and the Middle East. She and her daughter went adventuring and spent almost 7 years in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, where she helped found a university for Arab women. Her favorite summer while overseas was spent in Yemen at a small language institute.
As a writer and researcher, Susan has been most interested in philosophies of communication and in popular culture. Her most recent publication looks at the heroic image of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al Nahyan as the co-founder of the UAE (a chapter in Drucker and Gumpert’s Heroes in a Global World). Her interest in film took form in an essay on “Gothic Drama in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” (in Critical Studies in Mass Communication). Susan has published 10 other professional articles; innumerable brochures, catalogs, and manuals; and has presented almost 40 conference papers on topics as varied as Martin Luther King Jr.’s final speech, the original marketing campaigns for ibuprofen, and an analysis of Arab-Islamic values in the Persian Gulf. She is working on a recasting of Aristotle’s the Rhetoric in a form accessible to English as a Foreign Language readers.
Susan’s current passion is silent film and its connection to both the Golden Age of Hollywood film and to world film.
Find Susan on Twitter at @Cygnifyer.
Latest Articles
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Buster Keaton's Sherlock Jr. a Silent Comedy Gem
Keaton's Sherlock Jr. (1924) is a classic silent comedy film that goes beyond slapstick to capture a dreamscape that challenges the boundaries between reel and real.
Oct 29, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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The Making of the "Red Hollywood" Film Series
Behind the "Red Hollywood" series of Soviet musicals of the 1930s sits a tale that links 3 film festivals, a Romanian graduate student, and a New York film programmer.
Oct 13, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Russian Film The Circus Showcases Red Hollywood
A lavish Busby Berkeley-style musical, a critique of race intolerance, and Stalin's favorite actress add up to a movie that was wildly popular in the 1930s USSR.
Oct 12, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Classic Film Review, Minnelli's Cabin in the Sky
Vincente Minnelli's debut film as director was the MGM musical Cabin in the Sky. It featured an all-black cast which shone in its acting, singing and dancing.
Sep 19, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Film Review of Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
The classic movie, Meet Me in St. Louis, is the perfect model of a wholesome MGM musical. A period film set in 1903 St. Louis, it stars Judy Garland and Margaret O'Brien.
Aug 17, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Errol Flynn & Olivia de Havilland—1939 to 1941
Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland create movie romance in their last films together -- Dodge City, Elizabeth and Essex, Santa Fe Trail, & They Died with Their Boots On.
Jul 27, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Errol Flynn & Olivia de Havilland—1935 to 1938
Captain Blood, Charge of the Light Brigade, Robin Hood, and Four's a Crowd pair Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland together for the first four of their eight films.
Jul 27, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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The Redemption of Dallas in Stagecoach (1939)
Claire Trevor as the prostitute Dallas in Stagecoach(1939) is key to Ford's critique of social prejudice and defense of the noble outcast in this classic western movie.
Jul 19, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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John Wayne as The Ringo Kid, Stagecoach (1939)
The character study of the Ringo Kid is key to John Ford's noble outlaw motif in this classic western movie- and it's the breakthrough role that made John Wayne a star.
Jul 7, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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Themed Malls in Dubai Spotlight Architecture
A shopper in Dubai can begin the day touring the pyramids of Egypt, spend the afternoon traveling through Arabia and Asia, and end the day with a cafe au lait in Italy.
Jul 6, 2009
- Susan Z. Swan
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