Jennifer Boles is an interdisciplinary writer and artist of moving image, collage, sound, and installation. Her work explores expansive mediums for rethinking and experiencing time and history as material, ecological, affective, and sensorial. She is particularly interested in the changing relationship between humans and nonhumans, technology, and the earth through time, particularly as it relates to national mythmaking, capitalism, and the slow violence of the Anthropocene. Her work transforms archives, broadly conceived as both literal documents but also as haunted archives in landscapes and places, to create historical encounters in the present and future and engage with the disarray of our current moment. Her work has been exhibited as site-specific and gallery installations and theatrically in festivals such as Antimatter Film Festival, Chicago International, New Orleans Film Festival, Alchemy Arts, Mimesis Documentary Festival, DOXA Documentary Film Festival, Florida Experimental Film Festival, Chicago Underground, and others. She received a Ph.D. in History at Indiana University in 2015 and an MFA in Documentary Media at Northwestern University in 2019. She is currently Assistant Professor in the School of Film and Photography at Montana State University where she teaches film and sound production, film studies and history, and the history of photography.