Emily St. James
Armour, South Dakota, U.S.[1]
- Critic
- writer
- journalist
- author
Monsters of the Week: The Complete Critical Companion to The X-Files
1[2]
Education[edit]
St. James graduated from South Dakota State University in 2004 with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Journalism. During her time, she wrote for the university's student newspaper, The Collegian.[1]
Career[edit]
From 2009 to 2014, St. James was the TV editor for The A.V. Club, helping to build the TV Club, known for criticism of television shows episode by episode. The TV Club, while led by St. James, has been credited with helping build the online culture of television recaps.[5]
In June 2014, St. James joined Vox as their culture editor,[6] going on to become the Critic at Large.[7] She is also involved in Arden, a true crime parody podcast,[8] as well as running Vox's Primetime, a television history podcast.[9] She was a finalist in the 2015 Online Journalism Awards for her media criticism around horror films, Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign announcement, and her review of Mad Max: Fury Road.[10]
In 2018, St. James and fellow critic Zack Handlen wrote Monsters of the Week: The Complete Critical Companion to The X-Files, which was published by Tor Books.[11]
In July 2020, she spoke out against fellow Vox columnist Matthew Yglesias, following his signing of an open letter published in Harper's Magazine which called for an end to what it described as "illiberalism".[12] After a tweet about her criticism by Jesse Singal, one of the letter's signatories, St. James reported that she'd received death threats.[13][14]
Since beginning her own podcast, Arden, St. James has become more reluctant to engage in traditional review criticism, instead preferring to write about how a work fits into the larger culture.[15]
St. James has appeared multiple times on The George Lucas Talk Show, including during The George Lucas Talk Show All Day Star Wars Movie Watch Along and The George Lucas Holiday Special.
Personal life[edit]
St. James came out as a transgender woman in 2019.[16][17] She was interviewed on NPR's Weekend Edition Sunday about her experiences.[18] She is a founding member of the Trans Journalists Association and helped create its style guide, a resource for other journalists to more accurately write about transgender people and issues.[19]
She has been married to writer Libby Hill since 2003.[20] She changed her last name from VanDerWerff to St. James in January 2022, although initially only on a personal, rather than professional, basis.[21][22] St. James had a child in 2022.[2]