Julia Winckler's interdisciplinary research focuses on working with visual archives and collections. Memory and migration narratives, contested topographies, exile studies, co-production of knowledge and photography & activism are particular areas of interest.Â
For PhD applicants:Â Julia brings extensive experience supporting both practice-based and traditional research projects, including those funded through Techne and AHRC CPD studentships and particularly welcomes Phd inquiries that interact with any of the following:Â
Working with Archives and Collections: Photographic archives, Community archives, Museums, Private Collections
Memory Studies:Â Postmemory, transnational memory, cultural memory, communicative memory, personal memory
Art practice as research:Â visual, creative and ethnographic research methods/photo voice/photo elicitation/digital media technologies, site-specific interventions
Co-production of knowledge: popular education methodology, participatory methods, oral history, histoire croisée/regards croisés methodologies
Photography and activism:Â community art practice (global, historical & contemporary) and critical pedagogy
Photographers in Exile in Britain: contributions made by emigrés to the field of Applied Arts
She has supervised the following Phd projects to completion:
Vicki Painting: Reperforming the Fourth Age
Ilenia Atzori: Exploring contemporary interpretations of heritage in Sardinia through conversations and workshops in Castello, Masullas and Sinnai
Anna Sephton: Who invites the archive home? Animating a 1930s queer South African photographic collection through collaborative filmmaking
Stefanie Pirker: Das Fragment als Tatbestand: Fotografische Supren und Narrative im Werk Edith Tudor-Harts
Marina Castledine: Listening to the Lacemakers of Lefkara: a craft of resistance
MPhil:Â Katherine Anthony: The American Alt-Right in the digital age: Trumpism and the weaponisation of memes from 2015-2021
She currently supervises three Phd projects at the University of 91¿ì»îÁÖ:
Marion Allard: A critical examination of the mediation and interpretation of memories in Lao diasporic communities through personal collections, community archives and creative responses
Julia Kwinto: The Archive of Female Displacement and Migration
Karina Patfield: Silence from the archive: How can the archive inform an original method of blackout poetry seeking to ethically remember the Holocaust