• Skip to Content
  • Skip to Main Navigation
  • Skip to Search

Indiana University Bloomington Indiana University Bloomington IU Bloomington

Open Search
  • About
    • TTP Writing Group
    • TTP Reading Group
    • TTP Fall 2026 Courses
    • TTP Spring 2026 Courses
    • TTP Fall 2025 Courses
  • Faculty Directory
  • Graduate Student Directory
  • News & Events
    • Past TTP Events
    • TTP Events Calendar
    • TTP Newsroom
  • Contact Us

College of Arts + Sciences

Theory Theater Performance

  • Home
  • About
    • TTP Writing Group
    • TTP Reading Group
    • TTP Fall 2026 Courses
    • TTP Spring 2026 Courses
    • TTP Fall 2025 Courses
  • Faculty Directory
  • Graduate Student Directory
  • News & Events
    • Past TTP Events
    • TTP Events Calendar
    • TTP Newsroom
  • Search
  • Contact Us
A digital illustration of an abstract idea generated by AI.
  • Home
  • Faculty Directory
  • TTP Faculty

Joshua Malitsky

Associate Professor, Cinema and Media Studies; Director, Center for Documentary Research and Practice

Phone:
(812) 856-0405
Email:
jmalitsk@indiana.edu
Department:
The Media School
Campus:
IU Bloomington
Franklin Hall, M130G

About Joshua Malitsky

Research and Creative Interests

  • Documentary
  • film and nation-building
  • Soviet Cinema

Joshua Malitsky is Associate Professor in the Media School and Director of the Center for Documentary Research and Practice.  He is also adjunct faculty in the Russian and East European Institute, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, and the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.  He works on a range of topics related to documentary and other nonfiction media genres, focusing on films made as part of revolutionary political movements in East Europe (USSR, and Yugoslavia) and Latin America (Cuba).  He has published a number of articles on documentary history and theory including topics such as nonfiction film and nation-building, the relationship between documentary and science, the conceptual intersections between both documentary studies and science studies and between documentary studies and linguistic anthropology, and on the sports documentary.  He teaches courses on contemporary and historical issues in documentary, ethnographic film, 1920s Soviet cinema and art, media theory, media authorship, film and propaganda, Marxism and cinema, and sports media.  His book Post-Revolution Non-Fiction Film: Building the Soviet and Cuban Nations was published by Indiana University Press in 2013.  He has two current book projects: (Supra)national Geographical Imaginaries: The Birth and Growth of Yugoslav Non-Fiction Film, 1944-1958 and A Companion to Documentary Film History (Wiley-Blackwell).

Indiana University

Accessibility | College Scorecard | Open to All | Privacy Notice | Copyright © 2026 The Trustees of Indiana University