Adam J. Graves is an American filmmaker and philosopher. He earned an Academy Award nomination for his film "Anuja", which he wrote, directed and edited. Early life and education. Graves studied at the University of Pennsylvania, receiving a Bachelor of Arts in South Asia Regional Studies in 2001, followed by a Doctor of Philosophy in philosophy of religion in August 2007. He also spent time as a visiting student at Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi, India, in 1997. Career. Graves is a professor of philosophy at Metropolitan State University of Denver, where he founded the Denver Project for Humanistic Inquiry (Dphi), a public humanities center focusing on the intersection of philosophy, film, literature, and the arts. He previously taught at the University of Pennsylvania and in the University of Virginia's Semester at Sea program. Graves wrote and directed his first short film, "Cycle Vérité", which premiered at the Denver Film Festival in 2021. In 2024, his short film "Anuja" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in 2025. His films tend to explore larger philosophical and socio-ethical issues within the context of more intimate familial relationships. Philosophical Contributions Graves' philosophical contributions explore themes in phenomenology, the philosophy of religion, and hermeneutics, with particular attention to the nature of agency, moral responsibility, and narrative selfhood. He has worked on Paul Ricœur and the phenomenology of revelation, and developed a normative theory of action, which conceives of freedom as an “achievement of narrative self-understanding.” He has said that his philosophical thought fuels his work as a filmmaker. Personal life. Graves is married to multidisciplinary contemporary artist Suchitra Mattai.