Maggie D. Hennefeld
· ProfessorUniversity of Minnesota · Comparative Literature
Active 2013–2025
About
Maggie D. Hennefeld is a Professor of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Her research focuses on film and media studies, with particular emphasis on comedy, humor, laughter, silent cinema, film theory and history, archival film curating, feminism, affect theory, gender politics, and critical approaches to media historiography and social justice. She is the author of the award-winning book 'Specters of Slapstick and Silent Film Comediennes' (2018) and is curating and programming silent film exhibitions, including the four-disc DVD/Blu-ray collection 'Cinema's First Nasty Women' (2022). Her upcoming book, 'Death by Laughter: Female Hysteria and Early Cinema' (2024), explores the untold history of women who allegedly died from laughing too hard. Hennefeld holds a Ph.D. in Modern Culture and Media from Brown University and a B.A. in Cinema Studies, Comparative Literature, and Literary Theory from the University of Pennsylvania. She has contributed extensively to scholarly publications and is actively involved in curating film programs and organizing festivals and symposiums related to feminist and silent cinema, emphasizing community engagement and social justice through film.
Research topics
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Art
- Literature
- Philosophy
- Political Science
- Psychoanalysis
- Social psychology
- Gender studies
- Aesthetics
- Media studies
- Law
- Psychotherapist
- History
- Art history
- Theology
- Communication
Selected publications
Smashing the Patriarchy in Bologna
Film Quarterly · 2025-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingCinema Ritrovato is a nine-day festival at the Cineteca di Bologna that celebrates new restorations of widely unseen archival cinema. Maggie Hennefeld recounts her experience as a spectator and participant in the June 2025 edition, where she filled her festival docket with unruly visions of feminist and women-made cinema. Her viewings included French comedies by Coline Serreau, anti-colonial films by Jocelyne Saab (Lebanon) and Sumitra Peries (Sri Lanka), silent-era melodramas accompanied by live music, sizzling Nordic noirs, and Katharine Hepburn’s feminist acrobatics featured in a retrospective curated by Molly Haskell. Hennefeld concludes with a reflection about how Serreau’s rousing call to “smash the patriarchy” uncannily echoed her own participation in a panel that followed a screening of Karen Pearlman’s archival film Breaking Plates (2024), in which “cinema’s first nasty women” come back to life to galvanize a feminist revolution.
The End of Mourning or: Death by Laughter
Cultural Critique · 2025-09-01
article1st authorCorrespondingAbstract: Can you really die from laughing too hard? This article embraces the wager of fatal jouissance as an alternative to pervasive melancholia. Inspired by a lethal dentistry joke that allegedly made a woman laugh for eight hours in 1907, this article pursues the highest laugh (of all the laughs!) through her carnivalesque praxis, which involves cachinnation obituaries, interspecies bird jokes, and Medusan meta-cinema. When the old world is dying and the new one has yet to emerge, no rupture offers greater hope than the absurd leap of faith into dangerous joy—giving up the ghost in laughing extremis so the stillborn future can attain a spark of life. Death by laughter makes way for tomorrow.
On the Pleasures of Cinema and Daydreaming
Film Quarterly · 2025-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingIn this essay, I finally come out of the celluloid closet as an involuntary daydreamer. I have no greater pleasure as a cinephile than to let my mind wander—enfolded in otherworldly voices and transported by fluid cinematography to enter another realm. What is cinema if not a radical experiment in simultaneously existing elsewhere? Unfortunately, understanding movies is also my job, so I have to be ruthlessly accountable for the swirling orbit of filmographic factoids and comprehensible subtext, not to mention the imperative to provide a basic account of a film untainted by associative inner ramblings. The wager of pleasure in the history of film theory has been staked on precisely this problem. In this short essay, I draw on feminist film theories of creative spectatorship, incomplete archives, and speculative historiography to argue that cinematic pleasure can be political on one’s own terms.
Film Quarterly · 2025-01-01
articleThere has been no concept as foundational as pleasure in the history of film studies and film theory in particular. During the 1970s, film scholars debated pleasure as a deeply ambivalent promise, some finding it an outright synonym for the self-delusion and alienation driven by the market forces that shape commercial cinema’s narrative language and ideological apparatus. Today, scholars and cinephiles alike are still haunted by an unresolved, latent preoccupation with the issue of collective and individual pleasure. This dossier investigates the matter on a global scale, working from the nineteenth century to the present. Spanning the joys of criticism and critique, lost archives of queer fandom, transgressive genres of eroticism, and film theories of daydreaming and escapism, the six essays of the dossier intervene in the discourse around cinema pleasure by revealing its forgotten genealogies and wayward potentials.
3 An All Too Brief History of Laughter and Death
Columbia University Press eBooks · 2024-04-25
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingFeminist World-Making with <i>Cinema’s First Nasty Women</i>
Feminist Media Histories · 2024-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingCinema’s First Nasty Women is a ninety-nine-film DVD/Blu-ray set that highlights silent-era comediennes and cross-dressed women. Cocurators Maggie Hennefeld and Laura Horak organized two live Zoom roundtables with members of the team who had created, taught, or contributed to the project, moderated by FMH editor Jennifer Bean. One included cocurator and film historian Laura Horak, Kino producer Bret Wood, cocurator and silent film archivist Elif Rongen-Kaynakçi, composers Renée C. Baker and Gonca Feride Varol, Indigenous film historian and booklet contributor Liza Black, and film scholar Kaveh Askari. The other included cocurator and film historian Maggie Hennefeld, silent film festival organizer Enrique Moreno Ceballos, film scholars and commentary contributors Yiman Wang, Aurore Spiers, and Kate Saccone, and film scholar Neta Alexander. Rachel Loewen transcribed the roundtables and Hennefeld and Horak condensed and cut together the conversations to highlight the key themes that emerged.
Columbia University Press eBooks · 2024-04-19
book1st authorCorrespondingCan you really die from laughing too hard? Between 1870 and 1920, hundreds of women suffered such a fate-or so a slew of sensationalist obituaries would have us believe. How could laughter be fatal, and what do these reports of women's risible deaths tell us about the politics of female joy?Maggie Hennefeld reveals the forgotten histories of "hysterical laughter," exploring how women's amusement has been theorized and demonized, suppressed and exploited. In nineteenth-century medicine and culture, hysteria was an ailment that afflicted unruly women on the cusp of emotional or nervous breakdown. Cinema, Hennefeld argues, made it possible for women to laugh outrageously as never before, with irreversible social and political consequences. As female enjoyment became a surefire promise of profitability, alarmist tales of women laughing themselves to death epitomized the tension between subversive pleasure and its violent repression.Hennefeld traces the social politics of women's laughter from the heyday of nineteenth-century sentimentalism to the collective euphoria of early film spectatorship, traversing contagious dancing outbreaks, hysteria photography, madwomen's cackling, cinematic close-ups, and screenings of slapstick movies in mental asylums. Placing little-known silent films and an archive of remarkable, often unusual texts in conversation with affect theory, comedy studies, and feminist film theory, this book makes a timely case for the power of hysterical laughter to change the world
2 Female Death by Laughter (Beyond Enjoyment)
Columbia University Press eBooks · 2024-04-25
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding“The Most Revolutionary Affect of the Masses”: Collective Laughter
Discourse · 2024-03-01
article1st authorCorresponding.
Feminist Media Histories · 2024-01-01 · 2 citations
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWhat do we, as feminists, need right now—from cinema, from archives, from our communities? How can filmmaking, film festivals, and social movements of the past inspire or befuddle us today? And what is at stake in selecting and presenting archival works by women to create new forms of community? Whether we hold space together in a movie theater or a virtual screening room, we cannot help but draw connections between the unfinished past and the open-ended present. Forging these links is the rallying cry of the feminist film curator. In this tenth-anniversary double issue of Feminist Media Histories, we argue that everyone can contribute to the collective project of archival film curating. Unrealized feminist histories pave the way to unforeseen social possibilities. In that spirit, please join our cabal of feminist archival film curators!We build on the labor, commitment, and imagination of many scholars before us. Writing forgotten women and other marginalized “makers” back into film history has been an energizing endeavor for feminist historiography, evinced in works by Jennifer Bean, Giuliana Bruno, Jane Gaines, Usha Iyer, Debashree Mukherjee, B. Ruby Rich, Shelley Stamp, Jacqueline Najuma Stewart, Patricia White, Yiman Wang, Zhen Zhang, and many others.1 The problem of systemic erasure requires speculative and unorthodox strategies to fill the void, or to “feel” it, as Barbara Zecchi redresses the blight of “archival dispossession” in her videographic essay on Helena Cortesina’s lost silent film Flor de España (1922).2 Saidiya Hartman lovingly fabulates the unwritten lives of radical Black women in her “archive of the exorbitant” in Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments, which has emboldened feminist embraces of “speculative” methodology, exemplified by Allyson Nadia Field’s 2022 FMH double issue.3 The wager of always asking what if?—“often borne out of the necessity of exhaustion—or unsustainability—of other approaches,” as Field remarks, encourages us to “stutter and wander,” Katherine Groo urges, and “respond creatively to the flames and cinders [we] find” in the pockmarked, unfinished archive.4 In fact, “we conceive of incompletion as constitutive of women’s film history at a number of levels,” declare Alix Beeston and Stefan Solomon in their double-duty introduction AND manifesto to Incomplete: The Feminist Possibilities of the Unfinished Film.5 Simply put, feminist futures reside in what’s simultaneously absent and present in the archive.It is the task of the feminist curator to cull those wayward fragments and unleash them onto the emergent, utopian impulses of the present. Feminist curators work in the gaps that feminist archivists and theorists have salvaged from the dustbins of the canon. Together we decide what to save, when, where, and for whom, and how best to frame these tantalizing outtakes for new communities dedicated to raising a ruckus through the resurrection of cinema.Feminist film curating exceeds traditional methods in academic scholarship. Examples run the gamut from digital networks (The Women Film Pioneers Project, Kin Theory, Rise Up!, Edited By, and New Directions in Film Historiography), through archival film festivals (In Visible Colors Remediated, Orphans Film Symposium, and FIC-Silente) and DVD/Blu-ray releases (Kino’s Pioneers: First Women Filmmakers, Pioneers of African-American Cinema, and Cinema’s First Nasty Women), to online compendia (Another Gaze’s Another Screen and Maya Cade’s Black Film Archive) and gallery exhibitions such as HKW’s No Master Territories and BAMPFA’s The Future Is Feminist. These projects often involve speculative forms of academic labor that question university hierarchies and what “counts” as research in the humanities, arts, and social sciences. Toward that end, feminist and queer filmmakers—such as Cecilia Barriga, Zoe Beloff, Zeinabu Irene Davis, Assia Djebar, Zackary Drucker, Tourmaline, Cheryl Dunye, Azza El-Hassan, Su Friedrich, Barbara Hammer, and Karen Pearlman—draw on the remains of the archive to envision lost or impossible counterhistories of cinema and thereby to curate new feminist film futures.To invoke Karl Marx, historians interpret the past; the point, however, is to change it. The twenty essays included in this double issue rally for political change by conjuring excluded archives and creating unruly spaces for their readmission in the present. Many of the essays are cowritten, collaboratively convened, and collectively voiced. They offer practical tools, instructive case studies, radical contexts, and pedagogic provocations for navigating the vast, scattered terrain of marginalized film archives as feminist curators.The issue begins with three peer-reviewed feature articles that propose novel feminist methodologies. Then follow three roundtables, inviting us to partake in crucial conversations with Black feminist filmmakers, silent film curators and musicians, and precarious racialized educators. Up next, a trifecta of short takes imagine lively forms for reincarnating the absent archive. Finally, we include eleven individual case studies of feminist archival film curating.That is the order of our table of contents—now let us tell you more about the methodologies of our madness, which are materially messy and incisively decolonial. Claire Cooley models this commitment in “Gathering Despite Scattering: A Feminist and Decolonial Method of Curation,” which finds inspiration in the Arabic word mutafarraq (to scatter, be scattered) in order to break from colonial curatorial practices rooted in hierarchy and extraction. Cooley thus gathers the scattered archives of Egyptian filmmaker, actress, and musician Bahiga Hafez, weaving them together in a tapestry modeled on the narrative style of Lebanese filmmaker Heiny Srour. For Marísa Hicks-Alcaraz, archives can be reclaimed against colonial scattering, silencing, and erasure through resistant practices of collaborative audiovisual remixing. “Home Movie Remezcla: ‘Doing Good Relations’ as an Approach to Archival Healing” does just that, drawing on Latina feminist practices of multimedia testimony to pursue “transformative resistance and healing from historical oppression and injustice.”Kendra Preston Leonard opts for the metaphor of recuperation to document the lives of three female accompanists—Charlotte Stafford, Mildred Fitzpatrick, and Marie Lucas—and composer Lily Strickland. “Imagining Women’s Archives of Silent Film Music” starts from “a thirst for the unmade,” to invoke Beeston and Solomon’s Incomplete manifesto.6 For Leonard, this is the only possible inroad to theorizing the “gender and loss” that run roughshod over the archive of incomplete, nonextant, and unrealized works by women composers and accompanists. While many of these cue sheets disappeared over a century ago, you wouldn’t expect a film festival from the 1970s to vanish with hardly a trace. The first Black women’s film festival in the world “left a particularly thin archive,” observes Hayley O’Malley in her speculative historiography of the 1976 Sojourner Truth Symposium, published in a previous issue of this journal.7 After sleuthing out and interviewing many of the original artists and participants from the initial event, O’Malley, Field, and filmmaker-curator Monica Freeman organized a screening series and symposium to honor the legacy of 1976. In March 2023, they moderated a roundtable with Ina Archer, Cheryl Chisholm, Jennifer Lawson, O.Funmilayo Makarah, and Yvonne Welbon—we are proud to include an edited transcript of their expansive conversation here.An animating impetus for coediting this journal issue was our own forays into curating as codirectors of Cinema’s First Nasty Women: a 4-disc DVD/Blu-ray set spotlighting feminist slapstick rebellion and queer gender play across ninety-nine films made between 1898 and 1926—all with original, new music. What’s amazed us most about this project has been its contagious spirit of feminist collaboration. So we wrangled twelve of our “nasty women” contributors to participate in a freewheeling Zoom roundtable (moderated by FMH editor Jennifer Bean) about the nitty-gritty of curating, teaching, scoring, producing, and contextualizing the collection.Rounding out our trifecta of feminist roundtables, Apryl Berney and Florencia Marchetti organized a series of conversations about radical pedagogy and precarious labor in higher education in the wake of their retrospective, “Not Your Model Minority: The Art and Activism of Renee Tajima-Peña.” Opening with the provocation, “What pisses you off?,” Berney, Marchetti, Rosanna Alvarez, Soma de Bourbon, and Susana L. Gallardo conjure Tajima-Peña’s radical anger in films such as Who Killed Vincent Chin? (1987), My America…Or, Honk If You Love Buddha (1997), and No Más Bebés (2015). They find archival outlets for simmering affects of rage, anxiety, fear, and depression—but also joy and resistance—across crises spanning anti-Asian violence, lethal pandemic illness, and the adjunctification of academia, while seeking energy and community in the pedagogy of feminist film curating on campus.Frustration “fuels a desire to bring stories and injustices to the realm of the visible,” remarks Marchetti. Reporting from the front lines of archival erasure, Feminist Media Histories journal founder Shelley Stamp attended the 2023 FIAF Symposium in Mexico City, devoted to “Women, Cinema, and Film Archives.” Only 1 percent of filmmakers whose work is collected in FIAF archives worldwide identify as women, notes Stamp, while “a host of unnamed and invisible women,” as one FIAF panelist put it, remain “trapped in our databases.” Kate Saccone offers a provocative rejoinder to the archive’s feminist death trap in “‘Wrath, Witches, and Wonderous Women’: A Curated Program of Lost Films,” in which she delivers on the promise of her title. Drawing on WFPP profiles and avant-garde curation strategies, Saccone concocts a three-screening series (with musical guidance and program notes) of lost silent films directed or written by women from Peru, Croatia, Egypt, China, Mexico, Poland, and the United States. To rewrite film history means daring to “curate differently,” as the vast majority of silent film prints remain irretrievably lost today.Happily, many films do survive—and curating them with a feminist eye does not have to exclude ambivalently feminist works, such as pre-Code Hollywood sex comedies or 1910s Danish tragic melodramas. For Pamela Hutchinson, “Curating Young Cinema” involves breaking down the barriers between screen history and the archival present. Hutchinson demystifies the misnomer of “old cinema” to resurrect a moment when the medium was “bursting with possibilities.” Toward that end, she invites us to “dance like the censor isn’t watching, and watch like film history remains unwritten.”And what is a feminist dance without an enlivening refrain? Say it with us: “2-4-6-8 / History Is Never Straight!” In their “messyfesto,” “Dragging the Archive: A Club Des Femmes Messyfesto,” So Mayer and Club des Femmes revive the energy of their playful curation of Leontine Sagan’s queer cult classic Mädchen in Uniform (1931), accompanied with drag performance by Georgeous Michael, to pull “the erotic play of stockings and nightgowns out of film history’s closet.” Like Mädchen, which was filmed in the grips of Nazi will-to-power and homophobic whiplash in late Weimar Germany, queer feminist film curation responds to transphobic neofascism with lesbian camp, embodied queer theory, and collective provocations to imagine otherwise.We can always imagine otherwise, but from where shall we do so? More than anything, fantasy is “a setting for desire,” as Linda Williams reminds us in her pivotal essay on body genres.8 Enter feminist elsewheres: an International Women’s Film Seminar in Berlin that celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in October 2023. Cocurators Elena Baumeister, Fiona Berg, Charlotte S. Eitelbach, Sophie Holzberger, and Arisa Purkpong reflect on “feminist elsewheres. A Making(-)Of Three Festivals in the Making” across its recurring iterations in 1973, 1997, and 2023. They theorize and thereby decenter the meaning of “elsewhere” as a plurality of “not yet fulfilled promises” by interrogating what (if anything—if not everything) has changed since 1973 and 1997 in the world of collective feminist filmmaking. Dayna McLeod, Ylenia Olibet, and Alanna Thain locate that change in an independent artist-run center in Montreal “dedicated to the promotion of videos created by women (in its most inclusive definition).” Their cowritten multimedia essay, “Curation as the Cure for the Archive: Groupe Intervention Video’s Vidéos des Femmes dans le Parc,” elaborates on GIV’s feminist curatorial practices to fuse together the archive and everyday life, converging on their annual event that exhibits feminist video art and helps cement community in times of loss, illness, and financial precarity.Or worse: snatched from the hellmouth of war and colonial occupation, archives safeguard fragile documents that testify to everyday resistance against unending subjugation. In those cases, their very survival demands nimble tactics in film restoration. Mathilde Rouxel presents the Jocelyn Saab Project, devoted to “Restoring and Curating Jocelyne Saab’s Cinema of Middle East Struggle,” spanning twenty documentaries that Saab shot on 16 mm in Lebanon, Egypt, Morocco, and Algeria from 1974 to 1989. “A collective restoration process to reclaim the memory of history,” carried out autonomously in Beirut, the project’s cache of Saab’s political cinema can now be programmed all around the world. But what do you do when the object of archival repatriation is implicated in the very structures of violence and oppression that simultaneously exclude its visibility? Regina Longo thoughtfully navigates this enigma in her nuanced case study of Albania’s first woman filmmaker, “Complicating Legacies: Restoring and Re-releasing the Films of Xhanfise Keko.” Longo reflects on her own role as an archivist and curator of the Albanian Cinema Project to redress silences about the atrocities of the country’s brutal dictatorship. As she argues, aesthetic commitment does not always align with historical reality when restoring and curating the works of an important overlooked female filmmaker.Feminist archives are nothing if not messy and contradictory. Sometimes it is a feminist gesture in itself to provide context for the significance of those archives to ongoing struggles today. Other times, feminist archives wear their political commitments on their sleeve (or their emulsion, if you’ll indulge the mixed metaphor). This was precisely the case for Freude, a Bay Area filmmaker and distributor of 1960s–1970s independent and experimental women’s cinema. Films about sexual liberation and sexuality were among the most popular subjects in her catalog, observe Tanya Zimbardo and Antonella Bonfanti in their evocative case study, “Serious Business: Freude and Feminist Film Distribution.” Gabriela Yepes-Rossel similarly unsettles dominant paradigms of Peruvian film historiography in “Curating Disruption: Reflections from Peru on Feminist Film Archiving.” Inspired by the Women Film Pioneers Project, Yepes-Rossel launched and curated Rebels and Braves (1913–2019), the first exhibition to establish the extensive participation of women in the history of Peruvian film production. She thoughtfully recounts her archival work, selection criteria, and the euphoric sense of community and possibility that emerged at the event.How do we choose what to save, especially when that choice imperils the survival of our own experiences and collective memories? Laura López Casado chronicles the formation and activity of Eskelera Karakola (EKKA), a self-organized feminist social center in Madrid, Spain—whose “accidental archives” were discovered in a closet in 2022. “Building a Feminist and Activist Archive: Challenges, Discussions, and Reflections” hashes out the debates that ensued about how and where to preserve the miniDV tapes, VHS cassettes, DVDs, and other print materials documenting the activist history of the center. Out of the closet and into the Lesbian Herstory Archives in lesbian feature film of the a from to the Film de and present the film as a for queer collective in of the and the of Lesbian Cinema in As they strategies of are what queer art curating can many often as as archival or at digital networks of and in of of Women’s Cinema in The country’s first feminist is devoted to curating films made by women across and social in vast catalog, in the between the digital and the of it the virtual to a queer in was “left by the for a screening of event to to the archival in curating cinema. to 2023, when discovered the the first of film and History through the and Curating on the meaning of in the of and offers into how archival practices to all our that spirit, we on feminist to the of curators and join us in a to and film history through the liberation of and To curate from the archive is to decide whose history in the present.
Frequent coauthors
- 13 shared
Laura Horak
Carleton University
- 9 shared
Lisa North
National University of Ireland, Maynooth
- 9 shared
Adam Hart
National University of Ireland, Maynooth
- 9 shared
Joel Westerdale
Smith College
- 9 shared
Allyson Field
Concordia University Ann Arbor
- 9 shared
Jenny Oyallon-Koloski
- 9 shared
Dan Nair
National University of Ireland, Maynooth
- 9 shared
Derek Long
Labs
Awards & honors
- Imagine Fund Arts, Humanities, and Design Chair: "Curating D…
- Faculty Residential Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, Un…
- Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship, Jackman Humanities…
- Mellon Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Histo…
- Annette Kuhn Essay Award (Screen Journal) (2015)
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