Shanghai University of Finance & Economics Summer Program. ENG 105 Introduction to Film and Film Theory. Course Outline

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Shanghai University of Finance & Economics 2019 Summer Program ENG 105 Introduction to Film and Film Theory Course Outline Term: June 3 June 28, 2019 Class Hours: 16:00-17:50PM (Monday through Friday) Course Code: ENG 105 Instructor: Professor Ross Hamilton Home Institution: Barnard College, Columbia University, New York Office Hours: TBA Email: rhamilto@barnard.edu Credit: 4 Class Hours: This course will have 52 class hours, including 32 lecture hours, professor 8 office hours, 8-hour TA discussion sessions, 4-hour review sessions. Required Textbooks: There will be a reader. You should also purchase at text or ebook: History of Narrative Film, David A. Cook Film Theory and Criticism, ed. Mast, Cohen, and Braudy (any edition) Course Requirements: In addition to readings and attendance at lectures and screenings, two and a term paper are required. Grading of all exams and papers will take into account clarity, grammar, spelling, etc. as well as knowledge of the topic being discussed. All essays should be submitted on time and in class. Late essays/exams will be penalized a full grade (e.g., a B+ will become a C+), and will not be accepted more than one week late. Extensions will be granted only for dire emergencies, and then only if you talk to me in person and before the due date. Also, always keep a photocopy of your essays: if for any reason your essay is lost, you will be responsible for furnishing a copy. 1

Grading: The final course grade will be determined roughly as follows: Mid-Term Exam 20% Final Exam 20% Paper 1 20% Paper 2 20% Attendance: 20% A note on participation. This is a lecture course, but students are expected to follow the lectures closely and be prepared to answer occasional questions asked in class by the professor. Students will be expected to participate fully in the discussion sections led by the teaching assistant. Grading Policy Number grade Letter grade GPA 90-100 A 4.0 85-89 A- 3.7 80-84 B+ 3.3 75-79 B 3.0 70-74 B- 2.7 67-69 C+ 2.3 65-66 C 2.0 62-64 C- 1.7 60-61 D 1.0 59 F (Failure) 0 Syllabus: WEEK 1 Topic: Introduction and Early Cinema The origins of film technology and film culture. Issues in film historiography. Narrative and documentary. Films by the Lumières, Meliès Brothers and the Thomas A. Edison studio. 2

Readings: History of Narrative Film, Chapter 1 Sigfried Kracauer, Basic Concepts Rudolf Arnheim, Film and Reality Rudolf Arnheim, The Making of a Film Rudolf Arnheim, The Complete Film Topic: International Expansion: Hollywood and Griffith Narrative in silent cinema. The consolidation of classical film style. Film and ideology. Birth of a Nation, Griffith, 1915 and Broken Blossoms (1919) History of Narrative Film, Chapters 2&3 Hugo Munsterberg, The Means of the Photoplay Topic: Weimar Cinema and Soviet montage theory Editing as the essence of cinema. The emergence of the mass hero. Socialist vs. Capitalist film. Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari, Mayer (1918) Nosferatu (Murnau (1922), Battleship Potemkin, Eisenstein, 1929 (selections) History of Narrative Film, Chapters 4&5 Vsevolod Pudovkin, On Editing Sergei Eisenstein, The Cinematographic Principle and the Ideogram Sergei Eisenstein, A Dialectic Approach to Film Form Sergei Eisenstein, Dickens, Griffith, and the Film Today WEEK 2 Topic: Hollywood in the Twenties and the Transition to Sound The Studio System. Chaplin. Issues in sound-film theory and aesthetics. Introduction to the auteur theory. Garbo: The Kiss & Anna Christie; Blackmail, Hitchcock, 1929, Modern Times, Chaplin, 1936 History of Narrative Film, Chapters 6&7 S.M. Eisenstein, V.I. Pudovkin, and G.V. Alexandrov, A Statement. Topic: The American Studio System and Orson Welles. Classical film style and film semiotics 3

Classical narrative style in the sound-film era. Semiology, cinesemiotics, and translinguistics. Bakhtin and dialogics. Enunciation theory. To Have and Have Not, Hawks, 1944; Citizen Kane, Welles, 1941 History of Narrative Film, Chapters 8&10 Christian Metz, Some Points in the Semiotics of Cinema Daniel Dayan, The Tutor-Code of Classical Cinema William Rothman, Against The System of the Suture Topic: Wartime and Postwar Cinema. Film and Cultural Studies Classical Style in the 50 s film. Cinema and social issues. Introduction to cultural studies. Popular culture oppressor or liberator of the social imaginary? Double Indemnity, Wilder, 1949, Mildred Pierce, 1945 History of Narrative Film, Chapter 11 Walter Benjamin, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Robin Wood, Ideology, Genre, Auteur. MIDTERM EXAM WEEK 3 Topic: The breakdown of classical style Assaults on classical narrative in 60 s film. Hitchcock as auteur. Cinema and interpretation. Psycho, Hitchcock, 1960 History of Narrative Film, Chapter 12 Andrew Sarris, Notes on the Auteur Theory in 1962 Peter Wollen, The Auteur Theory Topic: The politics of style The French New Wave and Hollywood film. Brecht and the politics of cinema. A bout de souffle, Godard, 1955, Jules et Jim, Truffaut, 1961 4

History of Narrative Film, Chapter 13 Jean-Luc Comolli and Jean Narboni, Cinema/Ideology/Criticism WEEK 4 Topic: Feminism and cinema Introduction to feminist cinema Swept Away, Wertmuller, 1993, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, Almodovar Laura Mulvey, Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema Christine Gledhill, Recent Developments in Feminist Criticism Topic: Hollywood 1965 to 1990 The New American Cinema. The Rise of Television. The Rise of Video Alien, Scott, 1979, various MTV videos Topic: Avant-garde cinema and Post-Structuralism. The poetics of cinema. Introduction to non-narrative and experimental film. Surrealist film, lyrical film, structural and post-structural film. Deren, Meshes of the Afternoon; Brakhage, tbd Maya Deren, Cinematography: The Creative Use of Reality Stan Brakhage, From Metaphors on Vision Topic: The Present and the Future Experimental film. Global cinema. Derek Jarman, Blue; Bill Viola, tbd; Andre Bazin, The Myth of Total Cinema FINAL EXAM 5