Dr Sarah Gilligan is Assistant Professor in Fashion Communication in the School of Design, Arts, and Creative Industries. Her research and publications centre on clothing and identities on and beyond the screen - particularly the distinct, yet symbiotic relationships between costuming identities, fashion, and star-celebrity culture in contemporary visual culture.
Sarah began working at Northumbria in 2020 as a Senior Lecturer, following a career in further and adult education where she taught and was programme leader for a range of courses including: Design for the Creative Industries, Art & Design, Photography, Media, and Film Studies.
Sarah has published a wide range of peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters tied to her research, and has also guest edited special issues of Clothing Cultures听(),听Queer Studies in Media and Popular Culture听(), and听Critical Studies in Men's Fashion听().听Sarah鈥檚 research has appeared in journals such as Fashion Theory; Film, Fashion and Consumption; Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty; Journal of Bodies, Sexualities and Masculinities听and the听Journal of Asia Pacific Popular Culture, as well as in the following books: Surface Tensions: Surface, Fashion in Fiction, Illuminating Torchwood, Women on Screen, Cinema, Identities and Beyond, James Bond in World and Popular Culture, Fashion Cultures: Theories, Explorations and Analysis. Additionally, Sarah is also the author of the BFI book Teaching Women and Film. 听
Her recent sole and co-authored articles include:
Sarah's current sole and co-authored research focuses on the fashioning of ageing star-celebrities in film and fashion media. Forthcoming publications include work critically examining costume, fashion, gender, and performance in the cross-media ageing representations of Tilda Swinton, Keanu Reeves, and Javier Bardem.听
Additionally, Textual Transformations is an ongoing experimental strand of Gilligan鈥檚 research on tactile transmediality in which modified books are used to bridge the material distance between media representations, clothing, cultural artefacts, and the emotions of lived experiences including ageing and grief. Together with her visual essay published in Lighthouse (27), her creative work-in-progress was recently exhibited in an installation at Gallery North, as part of the What are Words Worth group show (2024).听
Sarah is a member of the editorial team for Film, Fashion and Consumption journal and is on the editorial boards of Fashion, Style and Popular Culture,听Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty,听and the听International Journal of Sustainable Fashion and Textiles. 听She is a member of the Critical Costume steering group and a member of the European Popular Culture Association. Sarah is regularly asked to peer review articles and book proposals for leading journals, and academic publishers.
As the chair and co-founder (with Dr Petra Krpan, Zagreb) of the Fashion, Costume and Visual Cultures (FCVC) Network, Sarah received the prestigious British Academy Rising Star Engagement Award. She is currently co-organising FCVC2025: Fashioning Ageing, Emotion, and Memory in Film, Fashion Media and Clothing to place in Rovinj, Croatia in July 2025 in collaboration with Intellect Books. As part of FCVC Network, Sarah has previously co-organised international conferences in France, and Croatia, in-person and online events in the UK, and mentored PGRs and ECRs in the UK and internationally.
Sarah has presented her research and chaired panels at universities across the UK and internationally, and has delivered keynote papers and invited talks and workshops at conferences, pedagogical, and public engagement events.
Sarah is principal and co-supervisor for PhDs on clothing and identities, and welcomes inquiries from prospective researchers, collaborators, and non-academic stakeholders on topics connected to her research interests. Sarah is highly committed to widening participation in education, and her teaching and project supervision experience at Northumbria spans BA, MA, MRes and PhD levels.听 Sarah is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA), and is the NUPRS co-ordinator for the School, supporting HEA fellowship applications, and mentoring staff at different stages of their research and teaching careers. Sarah holds BA and MA qualifications in Media, Film and Cultural Studies, a Cert Ed, together with a PhD in Media Arts from Royal Holloway, University of London. Sarah's thesis Transforming Identity: Gender, Costume & Contemporary Popular Cinema听(supervised by Prof. Stella Bruzzi), was funded by a Thomas Holloway scholarship, and passed with no corrections.听
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