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The Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

»The Center for the Creative and Cultural Industries

The 21st century has witnessed a profound shift in the way we view the world and ourselves in it. A key part of this shift is the rise of ‘The Creatives’ – individuals, institutions, cities, and regions that examine contemporary issues and ideas through creativity and innovation. This has led to the formation of the rapidly growing field of Creative and Cultural Industries (CCI).

CCI has its roots in the arts and humanities and explores industries such as fashion, film and television, music, museums, performing arts, publishing, and tourism. With the rise of the digital economy, CCI has grown to encompass video games, influencer culture and digital storytelling. Beyond specific industries, CCI investigates the principle of creativity, including how creative thinking is used to solve problems, communicate complex ideas, and explore new ways of working.

The study of CCI at Chapman is globally connected and locally engaged. We explore how the Creative and Cultural Industries respond to major issues such as social justice movements and the climate crisis, while considering how creativity can help improve our cities and benefit our emotional wellbeing. We partner with cultural and educational institutions in Southern California to pursue hands-on research and teaching.

Patrick Fuery book
Dr. Patrick Fuery
Dr. Fuery’s ninth book, Intimacy and the Anxieties of Cinematic Flesh: Between Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis, was nominated for the psychoanalytic book of the year award for the American Psychoanalytic Association.
Ambiguous Cinema Book Cover
Dr. Kelli Fuery
Dr. Fuery’s book Ambiguous Cinema: From Simone de Beauvoir to Feminist Film-Phenomenology (2022) was followed in quick succession by her 6th book, an edited collection titled Film Phenomenologies: Temporality, Embodiment, Transformation, which was published by Edinburgh University Press in 2024.
CCI House address
CCI Announces Book Series
The Center for the Creative and Cultural Industries has secured a major book series contract with Bloomsbury Press to develop a collection of books exploring CCI from new perspectives. Dr. Patrick Fuery and Dr. Kelli Fuery will be the series editors.

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Creative and Cultural Industries Full Time and Affiliated Faculty

Dr. Patrick Fuery
Professor, Director of the Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

fueryDr. Patrick Fuery is a graduate of Murdoch University, Australia, with a BA (Hons), MPhil and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature. He has held posts at the University of London (Royal Holloway College), Sussex University, and the University of Newcastle (Australia). He is the author of eight books and has been translated into Chinese, Italian, French, and Korean. His most recent book is Madness and Cinema. His research interests include psychoanalysis, semiotics, literary and cultural theory, gender studies, film and visual studies, medicine and the arts. He is currently completing two books: a study on cultural disturbance and the sublime; and an edited collection on medicine, culture, and the arts.

Office Location: 428 N. Glassell, Office 101
Office Hours:T/Th 10-11am and 2:30-3:30pm or by appt.
Email: fuery@chapman.edu

Dr. Kelli Fuery 
Professor of Creative and Cultural Industries

Kelli Fuery

Professor Kelli Fuery completed her BA (Hons) at Macquarie University in Critical and Cultural Studies, graduating in 1995 with First Class Honors, and completed her Ph.D. (2005) at Murdoch University in Philosophy and Visual Culture. Before joining Chapman University, she held posts in contemporary film, media and cultural studies at Monash University, Australia; The University of Newcastle, Australia; and Birkbeck College, University of London.

She is the author of six books which explore the intersection of visual culture and philosophy—especially phenomenology and psychoanalysis— placing them in conversation with contemporary film, media, and creative practice. She examines how we experience images and sound not just as spectators, but as feeling, thinking, and ethical beings.

At the heart of her scholarship is a commitment to phenomenology, particularly through the work of Simone de Beauvoir and other existential thinkers. Fuery’s writing examines how cinematic and digital forms shape our perception of self, others, time, and space. Her book Ambiguous Cinema: From Simone de Beauvoir to Feminist Film- Phenomenology (2022) is a pioneering contribution to feminist and philosophical approaches to film, offering tools to interrogate ambiguity, affect, and embodied spectatorship.

Her broader body of work engages with psychoanalytic philosophy, particularly the theories of Wilfred Bion, to explore how media can act as a site of emotional processing, trauma, and ethical encounter. Her 2018 monograph Wilfred Bion, Thinking and Emotional Experience with Moving Images exemplifies her commitment to examining how thought and feeling are mediated by visual experience.

In New Media: Culture and Image (2009), Professor Fuery provides a philosophically grounded introduction to digital media that is particularly useful for students and creatives navigating contemporary culture. The book explores how new media technologies affect visual perception, identity formation and aesthetic experience, offering critical frameworks for understanding the relationship between innovation, culture, and meaning making in digital environments. It serves as a key resource for those interested in the intersections of technology, image culture, and creative industries.

Her most recent publication, Film Phenomenologies: Temporality, Embodiment and Transformation (Ed.)(2024) continues this line of inquiry, expanding film philosophy to consider how embodied viewing and sensorial meaning-making evolve across digital and interactive media platforms. The collection reflects her sustained interest in how temporality, transformation, and affect are shaped in both traditional cinema and emergent screen cultures.

For students in the Creative and Cultural Industries, Professor Fuery’s work offers a rich theoretical foundation to critically engage with cultural production, aesthetics, and the ethics of representation. Whether examining feminist soundscapes in urban cinema, the emotional life of media objects, or the politics of visibility and invisibility, her research equips students to think deeply about today’s complex creative media landscape.

Her current projects continue to push the boundaries between philosophy, culture, and creative media, making her work especially relevant for those who want to produce, critique, or transform contemporary media culture. She is a founding scholar for the British Psychoanalyst Council, an Editorial Board Member for Film-Philosophy journal and Special Issues Editor for Film Matters.

Office Location: 428 N. Glassell, Office 102
Office Hours: T/Th 10-11am and By Appt., for both must arrange ahead of time via calendly.com/kfuery
Email: Kfuery@chapman.edu

Faculty Collaborations

  • United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network:
    The Center for Creative and Cultural Industries was accepted into the prestigious United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, joining universities and research centers around the world. We have begun to develop a number of initiatives that directly address issues of environmental sustainability, gender and race inequality, and widening access to education. A substantial benefit of association with SDSN is that it bestows all CCI students with membership in SDSN Youth, SDSN’s official Youth initiative. In addition, CCI students will also be able to utilize open-access courses run by universities such as Harvard and Yale, as well as access to fellowships and scholarship opportunities.
  • European Cooperation in Science and Technology
    The European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) is a funding organization for the creation of research networks, called COST Actions. These networks offer an open space for collaboration among scientists across Europe (and beyond) and thereby give impetus to research advancements and innovation. Dr. Patrick Fuery joined a European Cooperation in Science and Technology-funded research project on Connecting Critical Pedagogies, Inclusive Art Forms and Alternative Barometers for Urban Sustainability Innovation through creative and circular technologies.
  • Youth Democracy Cohort (a UN based platform)
    The Center for Creative and Cultural Industries (CCI) has been accepted as a member of the Youth Democracy Cohort. The Youth Democracy Cohort (YDC) seeks to enhance the involvement of youth in democratic processes at national, regional, and global levels. The platform is composed of 9 co-leading organizations and over 550 member organizations worldwide, including governments, international organizations, civil society, academia and the private sector. The membership allows CCI to support its students and further its research in cultural diplomacy.
  • Envision OC:
    Organization that showcases the opportunities that are available in Orange County in career, enterprise, and lifestyle. CCI is exploring ways in which our students and research can work with Envision OC.
  • Acrylicize:
    An award-winning collective of Artists, Designers and Crafts workers based in London and Seattle. By playing in the space between art and design it tells the unique stories of its clients, creating bespoke artworks that champion their concept of ‘Art as Identity’.
  • Adobe:
    CCI collaborated with Educational Technology Services for the CCI program to be used as a case example in the application for Chapman to become a creative campus with Adobe. The University has subsequently been awarded this status.

Creative and Cultural Industries Part Time Lecturers

Black shirt and red hair photo of a girl. Dr. Alicia Boyce
Part Time Lecturer, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Ali (Alicia) Boyce (she/her) tends to Tongva land in Anaheim, California. She is a cis-Queer, Black/biracial abolitionist, wife, mom, plant mom, writer, artist, dance lover, sci-fi nerd, intersectional feminist, and rootworker. Ali holds an MSW, from USC, as well as an MA and PhD in Cultural Studies from Claremont Graduate University. In 2024 Ali completed her dissertation on Black diaspora and a theory she coined called the foster care diaspora (FCD). This project mapped and explored how each diaspora correlates with the reproductive health, social representations and constructions of Black women figures throughout the Black diaspora, who are consistently impacted by global foster care and transnational adoption systems. Ali’s writing and pedagogy places an emphasis on Black feminist theory, abolitionist frameworks, Black diaspora, geography, historiography, Marxist and Black Marxist theories, and concepts of radical rootworking and healing from the root.

Office Hours: By Appointment
Email: alboyce@chapman.edu

Megan ColeDr. Megan Cole
Part Time Lecturer, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Megan Cole (she/her) holds a PhD in English from the University of California, Irvine. Her research interests include the environmental humanities, 19th and 20th century American fiction, and literary journalism. Her work has been published in venues including Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, Studies in American Naturalism, and The Los Angeles Review of Books.

Office Hours: By appointment
Email: megcole@chapman.edu

Ms. Rachel Du Mont-Greenlee
Part Time Lecturer, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Rachel Du Mont-GreenleeRachel Du Mont-Greenlee is a Cultural Studies PhD student at Claremont Graduate University. She holds a BS in City and Regional Planning (Cal Poly SLO) and an MA in Social Anthropology (Goldsmiths, University of London). Her interdisciplinary research explores how cities function as vessels for memory, identity, and transformation. She focuses on topics including memory studies, architecture, gentrification, preservation, utopianism, museum studies, and material culture. Rachel is interested in how spatial politics and awareness shape our sense of history and belonging. As an academic, writer, and avid reader, her work blends epistemological inquiry with creative storytelling to examine cultural legacies in built and imagined spaces.

Office Hours: By Appointment
Email: dumontgreenlee@chapman.edu

Mr. Ryan Haley
Part Time Lecturer, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

RyanMr. Haley graduated with a B.A. in English from California State University Fullerton and received his Master of Arts in Comparative Literature from National University. He is the co-host of two independent podcasts, and producer of an additional two shows. He has also written and taught several podcasting workshops with his podcasting partner, and Chapman University Alum, Mike Gravagno. Currently Mr. Haley teaches multiple classes through the Center for Creative and Cultural Industries at Chapman University in the areas of Podcasting and Content Creation.

Office Hours: By Appointment
Email: rhaley@chapman.edu

Amanda MaloneDr. Amanda Malone
Part Time Lecturer, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Amanda Malone (she/her) is a writer and educator based in Los Angeles, CA. She holds a
PhD in English from the University of California, Irvine, and an MA in English & Creative
Writing from the University of California, Davis. Her research focuses on epic poetry and
novels by women, 20th- and 21st-century media, and issues of authorship, ownership, and
labor in the creative economy. She has taught writing at UC Irvine, Loyola Marymount
University, NYU, Rutgers University, and UC Davis, and works as a freelance content writer
and copy editor for arts and education organizations.

Office Hours: By Appointment
Email: amalone@chapman.edu

Creative and Cultural Industries Staff

Ms. Shannon Halverson
Program Manager, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Cat Halverson

Ms. Halverson has been with Chapman University for 18 years, 16 of which have been with Wilkinson College, and has been working with the Creative and Cultural Studies Initiative here at Chapman from its beginning. A graduate of the University of San Francisco with a BA in History, she also holds a Certificate in Arts Management from UC Irvine's Paul Merage School of Business and Claire Trevor School of the Arts. Ms. Halverson is always happy to meet and discuss the Center or the Minor, the easiest way to reach her is via email to make an appointment.


Office Location: 428 N. Glassell, Office 108
Email: shalvers@chapman.edu

Center for CCI Location


The Center for Creative and Cultural Industries is located at 428 N. Glassell. The hours are normally from 8 a.m. to 4:30 pm. However, to ensure that you are able to meet with a specific person it is advisable to first make an appointment. See below for links to faculty and staff contact information. 

CCI House

Dr. Patrick Fuery, Director of the Center for Creative and Cultural Industries

Dr. Kelli Fuery, Professor of Creative and Cultural Industries

Ms. Shannon Halverson, Program Manager, Center for Creative and Cultural Industries