CINE 267 - Film History 3-1960s-the present |
This is the third course in a three-part survey of film history (aesthetic, economic, technological, and cultural). This course focuses on contemporary world cinema beginning with various counter-cinemas of the 1960s, "new cinemas" of the 1970s, the rise of the entertainment economy in the 1980s, and concludes with a focus on present-day digital cinemas within a global and trans-media market. Students will be introduced to the basic visual and aural elements of film language and tasked with using this vocabulary to analyze cinematic texts. The primary goals of the survey are twofold: to help students recognize and identify particular historical approaches to understanding film; to enable students to apply a cinematic vocabulary to identify and analyze cinematic style in and across film texts and within and between film movements. Weekly campus screenings are required, and clips of films are used in class for close analysis and are an integral part of the course. Recommended Prerequisite: placement into WR 115 or above (college-level reading and writing skills) 4.000 Credit hours 20.000 TO 24.000 Lecture hours 40.000 TO 48.000 Other hours Syllabus Available Levels: Credit Schedule Types: Lecture plus Lec/Lab Arts & Humanities Division Media Arts Department Course Attributes: Tuition, Arts and Letters Restrictions: Must be enrolled in one of the following Levels: Skills Development Credit May not be enrolled in one of the following Colleges: College Now |
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