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Film Studies Bulletin 1993-1994 PDF

6 Pages·1993·0.28 MB·English
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Concordia University Department of Cinema 1993—1994 FILM STUDIES SEMINARS, NEW COURSES, AND SUMMER SESSION I. FILM STUDIES SEMINARS Are you doing B+ or higher work in your Film Studies courses? If you are, then think seriously about taking the Film Studies seminars in 1993—1994. There will be five seminars limited to 12 students each. The seminars are described below, and you can get more information by talking to the instructor or a Film Studies advisor. You will find that the seminars allow a level of participation not usually possible in the larger classes and also that students often have more independence in selecting the topic for their term work in seminars. Permission is required to register in the seminars. It is best if you talk to the instructor to get permission, but you may also ask Film Studies advisers for permission. The Film Studies advisers are: Professors Rist, Russell, Falsetto, Zucker, Waugh and Locke. Film Production students are encouraged to take these seminars, and there will be a Film Studies adviser at each of the April Film Production group advising days (April 8 & 13). However, since some of the seminars may be full by that time, you should ask for a letter of permission before then. FMST 418/4 Seminar in English Canadian Film (3 credits) Prerequisite: FMST 214 or COMS 316, and written permission of the Department of Cinema. Instructor: Tom Waugh A seminar concentrating on several troublesome corners of the Canadian Cinema in English. Topics likely to be treated include “John Grierson: Toppling the Myth,” “Landscapes in Canadian Cinema (Documentary, Avant—garde, Fiction),” and “Film Adaptations of Canadian Women’s Literature.” The course requirement includes an individual in—class seminar presentation. 1 FMST 414/4 Seminar in Film Directors (3 credits) Topic: Stanley Kubrick Prerequisite: Eighteen credits in Film Studies and written permission of the Department of Cinema. Instructor: Mario Falsetto This seminar will focus on the work of one of the key film artists of the contemporary cinema. We will explore all of the directors work beginning with KILLER’S KISS (1955) and ending with FULL METAL JACKET (1987). Particular attention will be given to Kubrick’s two masterworks: 2001: A SPACE ODYSEEY (1968) and BARRY LYNDON (1975). Through screenings, discussion and close analysis we will examine the workings of the films with particular to their formal, stylistic and narrative operations. The seminar will explore how the films generate meaning and what they can teach us about the construction of meaning in art. Varying theoretical approaches to the study of narrative will be investigated (e.g. Frye, Bordwell, Barthes, Todorov, Culler, Booth, etc.) We will examine questions of structure, point-of-view, visual/editing strategies, subjectivity, character/performance, distanciation/empathy, I representation, and the adaption of literature to film. Class participation will be crucial and each student will be expected to make one in—class presentation. Other films to be analyzed are: THE KILLING (1956), PATHS OF GLORY (1957), LOLITA (1962), DR. STRANGELOVE (1964), A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971), and THE SHINING (1980) FMST 423/4 Seminar in Comparative Stylistic and Formal Analysis (3 credits) Prerequisite: Written permission of the Department of Cinema. Instructor: John Locke This seminar examines the work of Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock. Each week a film by Welles or Hitchcock is screened and then discussed using the Steenbeck viewing table. The seminar is about the use of formal analysis to understand film style. An additional aim of the close analysis of these films is to question familiar critical views about them. These films have been discussed so frequently in the literature that an effort needs to be made to break with the conventional views and look again at the films themselves. The principal written work required is an essay about a particular Welles or Hitchcock film selected by the student at the beginning of the term. The student concentrates on this one film, making both a presentation to the seminar and a written analytic report. 2 FMST 425/2 Seminar in Contemporary Film Theory (3 credits) Prerequisite: Written permission of the Department of Cinema. Instructor: Carole Zucker The seminar will be an intensive study of a selected group of topics in film theory from the mid—1970’s to the present. The course will reflect the incorporation of different disciplines and approaches in film theory such as semiotics, post—structuralism, linguistics, psychoanalysis, phenomenology, marxism, feminism, formal analysis, literary and rhetorical criticism, as well as giving consideration to cultural theories of ideology, enunciation, narrative, genre, and view positioning. Texts by authors such as Roland Barthes, Raymond Bellour, Walter Benjamin, David Bordwell, Noel Carroll, Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, Teresa de Lauretis, Richard Dyer, Stephen Heath, Brian Henderson, Frederic Jameson, Jacques Lacan, Christian Metz, Laura Mulvey, Dudley Andrew, Kaja Silverman, Peter Wollen, and Robin Wood are possibilities for study. Each of the topics covered by the course will be related to in—class screenings. An in—class oral presentation and paper may be required. FMST 324/2 Film Script Analysis (3 credits) Prerequisite: Second—year standing* and six credits in Film Studies. Instructor: T.B.A. A study of the film script both as a basis for the construction of a film and as an identifiable component of film with its own history and value. Examples from film history as well as the work of major scriptwriters are analyzed in their written form and through film screenings. The stages of script development from story idea through shooting script are discussed. II. SPECIAL FILM STUDIES COURSES The courses listed below are courses which are not among the courses given every year or every second year in Film Studies. Hence, they may not be given again while you are at Concordia. FMST 335D/2 Aspects of National Cinemas (3 credits) Special Subject: Japanese Cinema Prerequisite: Second Year Standing*. Instructor: Katie Russell This course will look at the history of Japanese cinema from the 1930’s to the 1980’s. We will look at the different ways that Japanese directors have interacted with the Hollywood style of filmmaking, and at the different ways filmmakers have addressed Japanese history and social inequalities. Readings in Japanese literature, aesthetics and culture will help to determine the ways in which Japanese film has incorporated elements of traditional Japanese culture. We will also critically examine the Western literature on Japanese cinema. What can we learn from the differences between Japanese and Western cinema? How and why have Western writers on Japanese film addressed those differences? In this way the course will also provide an historical and theoretical understanding of cross—cultural criticism. FMST 411C/4 Advanced Studies in Film Genres (3 credits) Special Subject: Melodrama Prerequisite: FMST 211, FMST 322 or COMS 310. Instructor: Katie Russell Melodrama is perhaps the most pervasive genre of American and International cinema, mixing with innumerable other genres as well as developing as a powerful popular form in itself. What was once deemed to be trashy sentimentality is now recognized as an important cultural expression of identity politics, historical inequities and political resistance. In this course we will study a range of theories and histories of melodrama. The films will include early American cinema, the American woman’s film and ‘950’s auteurs such as Douglas Sirk and Nicholas Ray. We will also look at examples of International melodramas from Asia, Europe, South America and South Africa in which the genre takes on specific cultural and historical significance. FMST 325/2 Film Acting (3 credits) Prerequisite: Second Year Standing* Instructor: Carole Zucker A course on the aesthetics, history and theory of film acting and performance. Among the issues studies are: the creation of star personas; casting against type; the influence of the script on the performance; the use of improvisation; performance in New Wave films; eroticism in film acting; the gesture system in silent film acting; and ensemble acting. Actors such as Marion Brando, James Dean, Marlene Dietrich, Jean—Paul Belmondo and Humphrey Bogart are discussed, as are directors noted for their work with actors such as Kazan, Bresson, Rivette, Scorsese and Coppola. Individual scenes from films are analyzed closely. FMST 411B/2 Advanced Studies in Film Genres (3 credits) Special Subject: Radical Documentary Prerequisite: FMST 211, FMST 322 or COMS 310. Instructor: Tom Waugh Filmmakers committed to radical social criticism and change: a lecture course focusing on both historical traditional and contemporary work. Debates around realism vs experimentation, mainstream vs margins, the New Left and postcolonial theory are touched on in the course readings and discussions. Classical filmmakers such as Vertov, Ivens, and Renoir are examined alongside contemporaries such as Gilles Groulx, Barbara Kopple, Trinh T. Minha—ha, Santiago Alvarez, Anand Patwardhan and Marlon Riggs as well as collective producers such as “Newsreel.” III SUMMER FILM STUDIES COURSE FMST 398H/l Special Topics in Film Studies Special Subject: First Nations and Film Instructor: Michelle Vigeant This survey course will focus on the aesthetics and socio—cultural history of the representation of and by First Nations people on film and video. The emphasis will be on Canada, the U.S., and Latin America but important works from Australia and Asia will also be studied. Like the Cinema Department’s “Women and Film” course, this new course will cover both mainstream and experimental or marginal works, both fiction and documentary, and both works about native people and by native people. Among the native filmmakers who may be represented are Alaniz Obomsawin, Loretta Todd, Ruby Truly, Gil Cardinal, Will Campbell, Zacharias Dunuk, and Willy Dunn, while other artists, non—native and/or from other continents, might include Tracey Moffat, Dennis O’Rourke, Arlene Bowman, and Jorge Bodansky. The course readings will reflect the rich interdisciplinary debate over recent years around minority representation, cultural appropriation, and postcolonial theory. Fewer than 66 credits remaining in the programme.

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