FILMG-6420-1: Graduate Film History
Spring 2020
- Subject: Graduate Film
- Type: Seminar
- Delivery Mode: In-Person
- Level: Graduate
- Campus: San Francisco
- Course Dates: January 21, 2020 — May 08, 2020
- Meetings: Fri 12:00-03:00PM, San Francisco - Main Building - Production Stage
- Instructor: Nilgun Bayraktar
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 15/24
Nilgun Bayraktar
Chair, History of Art and Visual Culture Program
Associate Professor, History of Art and Visual Culture Program
Description:
This course provides an advanced introduction to the history of cinema from the end of the nineteenth century through the international development of film as a transformative technology, art form, and commercial medium up to the present time. We will explore the major movements in cinema (including the silent era; classical and post-classical Hollywood cinema; German Expressionism; Soviet montage cinema; experimental, documentary, and avant-garde cinema; Italian Neorealism; French New Wave; Bollywood Cinema; Third Cinema; and global art cinema). By concentrating on the historical development of filmic mise-en-scene, the photographic image, editing, cinematography, and the relation of sound to the image, students will learn to view film as a complex visual language and to understand how the combination of sound and image articulate film's narrative, psychological, social and ideological purposes. We will integrate our investigations of cinematic issues with those of class, gender, and race.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
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