Gundolf S. Freyermuth Explained

Gundolf S. Freyermuth (born 1955) is a German-American professor for media studies and author. He is co-founder since 2010, together with Prof. Björn Bartholdy, of the Cologne Game Lab at the Technical University of Cologne in Germany.[1]

Biography

Freyermuth is a founding director and Professor of Media and Game Studies at the Cologne Game Lab, as well as Professor of Comparative Media Studies at the Internationale Filmschule Köln.[2]

He has written and edited some 20 books of non-fiction and fiction, including three novels, and published more than 500 essays, features, and articles. He has also directed documentaries and written scripts for radio plays, documentaries, and feature films.[1] Freyermuth's research concentrates on the development of new artistic and communicative practices, new forms of linear and non-linear audiovisuality, network culture, and cross- and transmediality.

Freyermuth studied comparative literature and aesthetics at the Free University of Berlin and wrote his Ph.D. thesis on the aesthetic impact of the techno-cultural processes of digitalization, completed in 2004.

Before beginning his career in academics, Freyermuth held positions as editor, department head, reporter and head reporter for German magazines (such as stern and Tempo). Furthermore, he wrote numerous texts as a freelance writer on such topics as literature, film and digital media, while living on the West Coast.

Gundolf S. Freyermuth is a dual German-American citizen[3] and the brother of German-American entertainment lawyer and film producer Ortwin Freyermuth.

Partial list of publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cologne Game Lab. colognegamelab.de. 2 January 2016. 26 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160126104911/http://www.colognegamelab.de/institute/people/gundolf-s-freyermuth/. dead.
  2. Book: Book Details : Games | Game Design | Game Studies. January 2016 . cup.columbia.edu. 9783837629835 . 2 January 2016.
  3. Web site: Biography – Gundolf S. Freyermuth .