Neil Kleinman is the senior fellow in the Corzo Center for the Creative Economy and professor of Multimedia and Communication at the University of the Arts, where, until recently, he served as dean of the College of Media & Communication and director of the Philadelphia Applied Research Labs. Previously he served as dean of the College of Liberal Arts, director of the Institute for Publications Design, director of the doctoral program in Communications Design, and co-director of the School of Communication Design – all at the University of Baltimore.
Kleinman has published and taught in a number of discipline areas: law, literature, writing, technology, design, the digital economy and marketing, as well as on the influence of technologies on society. He’s been a book, magazine, and newspaper editor and co-author of a book on German propaganda (The Dream that Was No More aDream) and the editor of a book on mime (The Mime Book).
Kleinman has a JD from the University of Pennsylvania and a PhD in English from the University of Connecticut.
Neil Kleinman is the senior fellow in the Corzo Center for the Creative Economy and professor of Multimedia and Communication at the University of the Arts, where, until recently, he served as dean of the College of Media & Communication and director of the Philadelphia Applied Research Labs. Previously he served as dean of the College of Liberal Arts, director of the Institute for Publications Design, director of the doctoral program in Communications Design, and co-director of the School of Communication Design – all at the University of Baltimore.
Kleinman has published and taught in a number of discipline areas: law, literature, writing, technology, design, the digital economy and marketing, as well as on the influence of technologies on society. He’s been a book, magazine, and newspaper editor and co-author of a book on German propaganda (The Dream that Was No More aDream) and the editor of a book on mime (The Mime Book).
Kleinman has a JD from the University of Pennsylvania and a PhD in English from the University of Connecticut.