ANTH 250 Visual Anthropology
In an increasingly visually-oriented world, this course focuses on the use of
photographs and film to represent people from various cultures, as well as the use
of film by indigenous groups to represent themselves. We learn about cultures through
visual and narrative means, and critically analyze the filmmaking process, as well
as other forms of visual media. (CW, SB)
ARTH/PHIL 389 Aesthetics and Contemporary Art
An introduction to aesthetics as a theoretical discipline in its own right, a
discipline concerned with the nature of representation and thus with beauty and
art. The course will focus in particular on issues of aesthetics and visual representation;
the relationship between visual arts, literature and other art forms; the efficacy
of aesthetic theory as a mode of reading and interpretation. We will explore these
issues in relation to specific works of visual art, film, and literature. Texts
by, among others, Kant, Hegel, Schlegel, Freud, Adorno, Kafka, Benjamin, Derrida,
and Sontag. (LS, VA)
ENGF 269 Introduction to Film Studies
A basic introduction to the concepts and techniques of film analysis and criticism.
Required for the Film Studies minor and highly recommend as a prerequisite for more
advanced Film Studies courses. (LS, W1)
ENGF 275 Film and the Environment
Our daily lives
happen within an environment. Like cinema, our lived environment has
spatial and temporal contours; moreover, our daily environment鈥攁s remembered
and projected鈥攈as been informed,
imagined, predicted, and challenged by our experience of the world on a screen.
Studying cinematic environment introduces new ways of talking about our world.
How can the 鈥渃hange mummified鈥 at the heart of cinema capture and reveal
climate and environmental change? In this course, we will study the ways that
1) humans and environments interact within a film, 2) cinematography,
editing, mise-en-scene, and sound produce and capture an environment as
film, and 3) audiences and films interact within cinematic and lived
environments. While 鈥淔ilm and the Environment鈥 might bring to mind conventional
nature documentaries featuring an authoritative voiceover describing intricate
phenomena, this course instead considers how every film relates to the
environment through the mechanical reproduction and mass production of space
and time. Moreover, cinema鈥攊tself an art of ephemera鈥攃an slow, reveal, or
accelerate changes in the environment. Including formalist, ecological, and
phenomenological study of film, this course explores film鈥檚 revelatory capacity
and creative production of the environment. Films likely include the following:
Moonrise Kingdom, The Straight Story,
There Will Be Blood, Sherlock, Jr., Days of Heaven, An Inconvenient Truth,
Meek鈥檚 Cutoff, Children of Men, Grizzly Man, Princess Mononoke, Beasts of the
Southern Wild, Microcosmos, Thelma and Louise, Jaws, To Be and To Have, Soylent
Green.
ENGF 310 French New Wave
The French New Wave refers to a period of world film history (generally 1959-1964)
in which artists feverishly directed their cinephilia toward the creation and criticism
of a generically-hybrid, formally experimental, and highly allusive cinema. Impatient
with films that merely adapted literary narratives or painterly aesthetics, French
New Wave artists and critics self-reflexively called attention to cinematic techniques
of making meaning and telling stories. This course explores the important films
and writings by/about French New Wave artists such as Varda, Truffaut, Godard, Resnais,
Chabrol, and Rohmer. Students will gain not only an expanded knowledge of film history
but also an increased understanding of cinematic narratives and styles. Recommended
prerequisite: ENGF 269 or ENGL 223. (LS)
ENGF 358 African Film
A study of feature films and documentaries made by African filmmakers, focusing
on issues of globalization, education, gender, popular culture and environmental
change in contemporary Africa. Recommended prerequisite: At least one previous course
in African literature or African history. (LS)
ENGF 381 Film Theory
This course explores theories of how and why films make meaning, how and why
spectators create and absorb these meanings, and the role of film within historical,
cultural, psychological, and social contexts. We will begin with early film theories
that attempt to make sense of cinema at its beginnings: what makes film different
from the other arts? Are we attracted to narrative or to spectacle, and how has
this attraction (as well as narrative and spectacle themselves) changed over the
years? We will then chronologically move through the century of film theory: Formalist
film theorists focus on the transformative potential of the medium itself, the degree
to which close-ups, for example, can "defamiliarize" and thus "make new" an otherwise
ordinary object. Proponents of realism advocate the camera鈥檚 transparent absorption
of the world; they herald films that privilege an audience鈥檚 active participation
in the diegesis (enabled by, for example, the long take and deep focus of Welles,
for example). While structuralist theorists attempt to schematize film meaning by
outlining film codes and conventions that govern our interpretations, psychoanalytic
and feminist film theories claim that spectatorial relationships resemble the structure
of the subconscious (in which desire, identification, and objectification affect
meaning). From this focus on the individual spectator, we will consider how film
creates and impacts audiences, more generally: What universal claims, if any, define
our understanding of and relationship to film? Recommended Prerequisite: ENGF 269
or ENGL 223. (LS)
ENGF 382 Non-Fiction Film
This course examines non-fiction film in the context of ethical, ideological,
socio-political, environmental, and aesthetic concerns. What can the art of film
contribute to documenting a place, time, issue, or event? How have cinematic issues
of ethics and aesthetics changed over time? How have spectators' expectations for
cinematic truth changed over time? What responsibilities does an artist have to
her world? What does non-fiction film contribute to the history of representing
subjects such as war, death, beauty, pathos, happiness, memory, justice, friendship,
or love? How do non-fiction films combine fictional and documentary conventions,
and what distinguishes non-fiction film from writing or photography? To explore
these questions, this course will examine a range of international films from a
variety of historical periods. Recommended Prerequisite: ENGF 269 or ENGL 223. (LS)
ENGF 390 Topics in Film Studies
Intensive focus on a particular cinematic subject. Possible subjects include
Film Comedy, Silent Cinema, Women and Film, Coming of Age in Cinema, Melodrama,
Art Cinema, Film Noir, Cinephilia, Films of the 1950s (or other decades/years),
Cinema and Landscape, Cinematic Time, Star Studies, and additional genres or national
cinemas. Recommended Prerequisite: ENGF 269 or ENGL 223. (LS)
ENGF 490 Topics in Film Studies
Intensive study of a particular subject in Film Studies. This course will focus
on a particular film genre, figure (e.g. director, star, theorist), national cinema,
or school of theory or criticism. Prerequisites: any 300-level course in English.
Open to seniors; open to other students by permission of the instructor. Recommended
Prerequisites: ENGF 269, ENGL 223, or any 300-level ENGF course. (LS, W2)
ENGF 490 Topics in Film Studies: Cinematic Landscape and Atmosphere
This
course explores landscape and atmosphere as what moves within a
cinematic environment. How does atmosphere enliven landscape, and how might
atmospheric dynamism (wind, rain, fog, snow, sunlight) lend movement to a
landscape, much like a film camera activates a world? This course privileges atmospheric
identification, a phenomenological way of studying film. Enabled by film鈥檚
affinity for and capacity to reveal the ephemeral, atmospheric identification
allows us to imagine, for example, rain on our hands, sun on our face, snow
sifting through the air before us; such sensitivity inspires us to appreciate a
dynamic landscape as a source of meaning and attention. Though this course
doesn鈥檛 have specific prerequisites, students would be better prepared for the
course鈥檚 advanced rigour鈥攚eekly readings and screenings, sustained seminar
discussion, regular writing assignments, seminar paper and presentation鈥攚ith
prior film experience. Texts include the following: Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space; Robert Bird, Elements of Tarkovsky; Giuliana Bruno, Atlas of Emotion: Journeys in Art,
Architecture, and Film; Annette Kuhn, Ratcatcher;
Cinema and Landscape, eds. Graeme Harper and Jonathan Rayner. Films likely
include Manhattan, The Mirror, I am Love,
Heavenly Creatures, Tokyo Story, Red Desert, I Know Where I鈥檓 Going!, Badlands,
Summer Hours, Ratcatcher, Climates, L鈥橝talante, The Day I Became a Woman, It
Happened One Night, Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, Top of the Lake,
Still Walking.听
ENGL 223 Literary and Cinematic Adaptations
According to
biology, adaptation involves 鈥渢he process of change by which an organism or
species becomes better suited to its environment鈥 (Oxford English Dictionary). To what extent does adaptation, with
regard to image, sound, and narrative, similarly render a literary text 鈥渂etter
suited to its environment鈥? In this course, we will explore whether or how
films might offer a 鈥渂etter suited鈥 expression of story worlds. Despite the
fact that many people utter 鈥渢he book was better because鈥 as a judgment
regarding a film version of a beloved novel, film adaptations continue to enjoy
terrific popularity. This course has interest in not only why but also
how. Instead of evaluating a film adaptation through criteria of fidelity to
the novel, we will consider how cinematic techniques transform, translate, and
engage with literary text. By the end of the course, students will have a much richer idea of what adaptation, of any sort, might entail. Texts/films may include the following: Alice Munro鈥檚
鈥淏ear Came Over the Mountain鈥 with Sarah Polley鈥檚 Away from Her,
Vladimir Nabokov鈥檚 and Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 Lolita, Jeffrey Eugenides鈥 and
Sofia Coppola鈥檚 The Virgin Suicides, Charlotte Bront毛鈥檚 and Cary Fukunaga鈥檚 Jane Eyre,
Susanna Moore鈥檚 and Jane Campion鈥檚 In the Cut, David Goodis鈥檚 and
Fran莽ois Truffaut鈥檚 Shoot the Piano Player.听(LS, W1)
ENGL 248 The Holocaust in Literature, Theory, and Film
This course explores representations of and reflections on the Holocaust. Students
will consider what it means to represent an extreme or limit experience鈥攁n experience
felt by perpetrators and victims alike to be unrepresentable. Course texts will
include novels, memoirs, graphic novels, films, and excerpts from an array of theoretical
works. (LS, W1)
ENGL 270 The Theme of Woman's Vocation in Literature and Film
An examination of woman鈥檚 vocation as portrayed, prescribed, or challenged by
literature and film. Readings and film viewings will address both classic masterworks
and popular culture. Featured authors may include novelists and memoirists from
the 18th through the late 20th centuries (such as Defoe, Ballard, Burney, Bront毛,
Eliot, Gissing, Woolf, Drabble, Lodge). Selected films will reflect women鈥檚 changing
roles and aspirations from the 1940s through the present. (LS, W1)
FILM 210 Screenwriting
This course examines the practice of screenwriting. Students will be taught the
components of screenwriting, view a variety of films that are thought to contain
good examples of writing, and read texts devoted to the construction of story. Throughout
the course, students will craft a script of their own. Prerequisite is one of the
following courses: any ENGF or ENGL 200-level course, AFRI 358, ARTH 392, HIST 190,
RELI 315, or TART 290.
FILM 392 Great Directors
A study of several important film directors (i.e. Carl Theodor Dreyer, Woody
Allen, Ingmar Bergman, Peter Weir) that considers the artistic, conceptual, and
ideological merits of their work.
FILM 399 Independent Study
An intensive tutorial with a Film Studies faculty member on an aspect of the
discipline not otherwise covered in the curriculum. Prerequisite: ENGL 269 or permission
of instructor.
HIST 180 Theatre and Film in Modern China
Many of the critical issues facing the Chinese people in the twentieth century
are represented in theater and cinema. This seminar begins with a survey of Chinese
theatrical traditions within a broad historical framework. Then the course will
turn to exploring forms of popular performance and the development of Chinese cinema
through script analysis, discussion of historical context, and viewings of performances
and films. Particular attention is paid to how drama and film offers representations
of history, contributes to identity formation, and foments political change in 20th
century China. Writing will be a major component of the class. (HP, EA)
HIST 190 History and Film
This course subjects films on historical topics to discussion and analysis. It
probes how filmmakers treat historical subjects and introduces students to the methods
historians might use in evaluating the accuracy and impact of such films. (HP)
MUSI 180 Film Music
An overview of film music from the silent era to the present, covering important
composers and discussing the various techniques and aesthetic approaches involved
in combining music and film. Designed for all students. (EA)
SOCI 255 Gender in Film and Television
Gender is portrayed in and produced through film and television. The course will
examine key concepts of gender by examining how masculinities and femininities are
portrayed in film and television and shaped by categories of race/ethnicity, class,
and sexuality. Students will be introduced to content analysis and use it to produce
research about contemporary media trends. (CW, SB)