Skip to main content
Washington
University of Washington
College of Arts & Sciences
Quick links
Quick Links
Make a Gift
Directories
Maps
MyUW
User account menu
Search
Search
Main menu
Cinema & Media Studies
Menu
People
Faculty
Cinema & Media Studies
Comparative Literature
Adjuncts & Affiliates
Staff
Graduate Students
Visiting Scholars
Alumni
Alumni News
Alumni Profiles
Submit an Update
Programs & Courses
Undergraduate
B.A. in Cinema & Media Studies
B.A. in Comparative Literature
Minor in Comparative Literature
Scholarships
Careers
Resources & Opportunities
Graduate
Admissions
M.A. in Cinema & Media Studies
Ph.D. in Cinema & Media Studies
Certificate in Cinema & Media Studies
Progress Guidelines
Academic Placements
Study Abroad
Courses
Featured Courses
Current & Upcoming
Departmental Requirements
Registration Policies & Procedures
Research
Publications
Projects
Dissertations
Undergraduate
Fields of Interest
News & Events
Recent News
Faculty Spotlights
Student Spotlights
Calendar
Mailing List
Resources
Advising
Careers
Diversity
Internships
Scholarships
Related Centers & Programs
Seattle Film Scene
For Faculty & Staff
Emergency Resources
About
Overview
Stay Connected
Support Us
Contact Us
Make a Gift
Directories
Maps
MyUW
You are here
Home
Digital Humanities
Related Faculty
Golden M. Owens
Assistant Professor
Latest News
Congratulations to our Simpson Center Award Winners!
(January 4, 2026)
Related Research
Mal Ahern and Ranjodh Singh Dhaliwal, eds, In Focus: Images and (Infra)structures,
Journal of Cinema and Media Studies
65, no. 1 (Fall 2025), 156-201.
Owens, Golden. “Book Review | Not My Type: Automating Sexual Racism by Apryl Williams (Stanford University Press, 2024).”
Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience
11, no. 1 (2025): 1. https://doi.org/10.28968/cftt.v11i1.44403.
Owens, Golden. “‘Hey Google, Talk Like Issa’: Black Voiced Digital Assistants and the Reshaping of Racial Labor.”
Sounding Out!
, June 5, 2023. https://soundstudiesblog.com/2023/06/05/google-talk-like-issa-black-voiced-digital-assistants-and-the-reshaping-of-racial-labor/.
Sarah Choi, Racelar Ho, and Michael Trommer. "Shanawdithit VR: Exploration of Indigenous Opera in Immersive Media" (2020)
Sarah Choi, "Too Hot for a Pandemic,"
SCMS+
(Summer 2020), https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.cmstudies.org/resource/resmgr/scmsplus/Choi_Too_Hot_for_a_Pandemic.pdf
“Visual Poetry and the Poetics of Data Visualization.”
Journal of English Language and Literature
63.4 (2017): 659-74.
Support Our Department
Instagram
Newsletter