John Edgar Browning | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Nashville, Tennessee, United States | October 14, 1980
Occupation | Writer, Scholar, Professor |
Language | English |
Education | A.A., B.A., M.A, Ph.D. |
Alma mater | Florida State University; University of Central Oklahoma; Louisiana State University; University at Buffalo |
Genre | Horror non-fiction |
Years active | 2005–present |
Notable awards | Lord Ruthven Award (International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts) |
Website | |
johnedgarbrowning |
John Edgar Browning (born October 14, 1980) is an American author, editor, and scholar known for his nonfiction works about the horror genre, Dracula, and vampires in film, literature, and culture.[2] Previously a visiting lecturer at the Georgia Institute of Technology, he is now a professor of liberal arts at the Savannah College of Art and Design in Atlanta, Georgia.
Browning is considered an "expert on vampires specializing in the Dracula figure in film, literature, television, and popular culture".[3] His works expound upon Dracula, horror, vampires, the supernatural, the un-dead, Bram Stoker, and gothic and cultural theory. Browning has appeared as an expert scholar on multiple documentary television series and consulted a number of other productions behind the scenes, including: National Geographic Channel's Taboo USA,[4] Discovery Channel's William Shatner's Weird or What?,[5] the seven-part AMC documentary series Eli Roth's History of Horror, and History Channel's The UnXplained.
For his book Dracula in Visual Media, Browning documented over 700 "domestic and international Dracula films, television programs, documentaries, adult features, animations, and video games . . . [as well as] nearly 1000 domestic and international comic book titles and stage adaptations".[6] For the book, Browning won the Lord Ruthven Award, an award for deserving work in vampire fiction or scholarship.[7] The book was also nominated for the Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award (often called the Rondo Award) for Book of the Year in 2011,[8] as was his book The Vampire; or, Detective Brand's Greatest Case in 2023 for Best Classic Horror Fiction, co-edited with Gary D. Rhodes.[9]