词条 | Peter Vronsky |
释义 |
| name = Peter Vronsky | image = Peter Vronsky, Ph.d., investigative historian, author and filmmaker, 2015.jpg | caption = Peter Vronsky in 2015 | pseudonym = | birth_name = | birth_date = | birth_place = Toronto, Ontario | death_date = | death_place = | occupation = Author, historian, film director, professor | nationality = Canadian | ethnicity = | citizenship = | education = PhD in espionage in international relations and criminal justice history | alma_mater = University of Toronto | period = | genre = True crime, military history | subject = Serial killers, history, international relations | movement = | notableworks = The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004), Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become Monsters (2007), The American-Fenian Invasion and the 1866 Battle that made Canada (2011) | spouse = | partner = | signature = | website = {{URL|www.petervronsky.org}} | portaldisp = y }} Peter Vronsky is a Canadian author, filmmaker and investigative historian. He holds a PhD in criminal justice history and espionage in international relations from the University of Toronto. He is the author of the bestseller true crime histories The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004) and Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become Monsters and the forthcoming A History of Serial Killers From the Stone Age to the Present (August 2018). He is the director of several feature films, including Bad Company (1980) and Mondo Moscow (1992). Vronsky is the creator of a substantial body of formal video and electronic artworks and new media.[1] He has also worked professionally in the motion picture and television industry as a producer and cinematographer in the field of documentary production and news broadcasting with CNN, CTV, CBC, RAI and other global television networks in North America and overseas.[2] Vronsky's most recent book was published in 2011, The American Fenian Invasion and the 1866 Battle That Made Canada, a controversial new history of Canada's first modern battle – the Battle of Ridgeway fought against Irish American Fenian insurgents who invaded across the border from the United States on the eve of Canadian Confederation shortly after the American Civil War. He currently lectures at Ryerson University's History Department in the history of international relations, terrorism, American Civil War, Third Reich, and new military history. 1970sPeter Vronsky was a writer and film reviewer for Canada's national film magazine Cinema Canada and University of Toronto's The Varsity. He was a member of Toronto Filmmakers Coop and University of Toronto Film Board (Hart House). He studied with Canadian film directors Don Shebib, Clarke Mackey, and Peter Pearson at the Toronto Filmmakers Coop. Vronsky dropped out of the University of Toronto at the end of his second year to pursue filmmaking full-time. He wrote and directed two thirty-minute short drama films starring Paul Young from the Cardboard Brains: American Nights (1976) and The Sheep-Eaters (1977). He received several Canada Council and Ontario Arts Council Grants and directed and produced a thirty-minute music documentary special on punk rock for CBC television Crash'n'Burn (Dada's Boys) (1977) with the Viletones, Teenage Head, Dishes, The Ramones and The Deadboys, filmed at CBGB in New York and the New Yorker Theater and Crash'n’Burn in Toronto.[3] (Not to be confused with Ross McLaren's independent Crash 'n' Burn made the same year on the same subject. Vronsky produced and directed a feature film, Bad Company (1980). He worked as an assistant-director on Canadian feature films: Nothing Personal (1979), The Last Chase (1979) and Screwballs (1981). Vronsky frequently collaborated with documentary filmmaker Peter Lynch on Video Culture International projects and with horror film director Tibor Takacs who before he left for Hollywood worked as a D.O.P. and Art Director on several Vronsky films.[4] 1980sPeter Vronsky created numerous video art tapes and formal video installations exhibited in Canada and internationally in Tokyo, Paris, Rome, Amsterdam, New York and London.[1] He was the Artist-in-Residence with Sony Corporation at Video/Culture International, 1983. He frequently worked as an undercover video specialist – field producer with CBC's The Fifth Estate and CTV's W5. In 1984–1985 during the pioneering period of laserdisc development, Vronsky was the Head of Interactive Laser Optical Software Development, Sony Corporation-Video/Culture and the Project Director of the Berlin Wall Videodisc, Sony Canada-Image Over Time, 1985. He worked as a Field Producer/Cameraman for CNN International, Rome Bureau, 1986–1990. Vronsky was the Producer-director of Russian Rock Underground (1988), a thirty-minute music television special on underground ("unofficial") rock music in the Soviet Union, featuring Boris Grebenshchikov, Televizor, Zvuki Mu and Auktion.[3] 1990sVronsky was the writer-producer-director of Mondo Moscow, a feature-length documentary on incipient Stalinism and underground culture in the USSR, 1990.[4] In 1991 Vronsky investigated Lee Harvey Oswald's activities in the USSR in 1959–1962 and was the first Westerner ever to interview Oswald's friends, lovers and acquaintances in Russia.[5] Vronsky was the cameraman-line producer on The Hunt for Red Mercury, an investigative one-hour documentary (Discovery Channel – CTV) on nuclear weapons material smuggling in Chechnya, 1992. He was the writer-director of The Uncanadians, a NFB feature documentary 1994–1995 but withdrew his name from the director's credit in a dispute with the National Film Board over the film's controversial contents.) Vronsky was the Head of English Language Production, Panavideo, Venice Italy – service producer for Italy's national television network, RAI, 1997–1999. 2000sVronsky was the Queens Park/Toronto Bureau Chief at E-Press, Canada's first online news streaming service, 2000 and the Broadband Content Specialist, Canada-Invest.com, financial news streaming service, 2000–2001. He was the Director of Photography on the feature-length music documentaries, Life Could Be A Dream (Bravo Television, 2002) and I'll Fly Away Home (Bravo Television, 2004). He authored two crime history books, Serial Killers The Method and Madness of Monsters (Berkley-Penguin Books, 2004) and Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become Monsters (Berkley-Penguin Books, 2007). Vronsky returned to the University of Toronto as a full-time student from 2003 to 2010, completing the following degrees:
In 2015 Leah McLaren, writing in the Globe and Mail, reported on the strange disappearance in Cambodia of Dave Walker, a friend of Vronsky's. According to McLaren Vronsky was working hard to determine what happened to Walker, when the Canadian government seemed to want his story to be forgotten. Walker had told Vronsky that he had worked as an advisor for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) ferreting out genocidal Khmer Rouge perpetrators infiltrating Canada among legitimate refugees from Cambodia during the 1980s and 1990s. Vronsky suspected this could have played a role in his death in Camabodia. CurrentlyPeter Vronsky currently lectures at Ryerson University History Department in international relations, American Civil War, Third Reich, and the history of terrorism. In 2017, he was chosen as the Writer-In-Residence at the Toronto Public Library.[7] The third volume in his history of serial homicide, a global macro history or Big History of serial homicide, Sons of Cain: A History of Serial Killers from the Stone Age to the Present (formerly Serial Killer Chronicles) for the Penguin Random House Berkley imprint was published in 2018.[8] A chapter from this new history "Serial Killer Zombie Apocalypse and the Dawn of the Less Dead" was recently published as the prologue to the Serial Killer True Crime Anthology 2014. In it Vronsky compares the brain functions of a serial killer with that of a fictional zombie, arguing that the capacity for serial murder, rape, and cannibalism, originates with primitive survival instincts rooted in an older "reptilian" sector of the human triune brain that “misfires” for a complexity of reasons, ranging from familial, environmental, social, cultural, to perhaps even bio-chemical or genetic.[9] Peter Vronsky is fluent in English, Russian and Italian and resides in Toronto, Canada and Venice, Italy. References |