This course offers a broad survey of American cinema from its beginnings (and even its pre-history) up to 1960. While the emphasis will be on the dominant, narrative fiction film, there will be attention to other modes of American cinema such as experimental film, animation, shorts, and non-fiction film. The course will look closely at films themselves — how do their styles and narrative structures change over time? — but also at contexts: how do films reflect their times? how does the film industry develop? what are the key institutions that had impact on American film over its history? We will also attend to the role of key figures in film’s history: from creative personnel (for example, the director or the screenwriter) to industrialists and administrators, to censors to critics and to audiences themselves. The goal will be to provide an overall understanding of one of the most consequential of modern popular art forms and of its particular contributions to the art and culture of our modernity.
Cinema Studies (Undergraduate)
4 credits – 15 Weeks
Sections (Fall 2022)
CINE-UT 50-000 (13927)09/01/2022 – 12/14/2022 Tue6:00 PM – 10:00 PM (Evening)at Washington SquareInstructed by Treihaft, Lauren
CINE-UT 50-000 (13928)09/01/2022 – 12/14/2022 Thu8:00 AM – 9:00 AM (Morning)at Washington SquareInstructed by
CINE-UT 50-000 (13929)09/01/2022 – 12/14/2022 Thu9:00 AM – 10:00 AM (Morning)at Washington SquareInstructed by
CINE-UT 50-000 (13930)09/01/2022 – 12/14/2022 Thu11:00 AM – 12:00 AM (Morning)at Washington SquareInstructed by