What are
the courses?
Before you read any further, you should print out the English
Major Checklist for the Film Concentration,
a pdf that can be accessed by clicking here
[link coming soon]. It is
crucial for your timely progress through our program that you
complete the general education requirements as well as the other
course requirements for earning an English Major with a film
concentration. Check with your advisor if you have any
questions, or contact one of the
film concentration faculty
if you do not yet have an advisor or are considering switching
majors.
These descriptions are for the required film courses for the film
concentration but may also be of use to students from other majors who wish
to take a film course while they are at Salisbury University. For
students taking these courses as electives, bear in mind that the
upper-level courses in the English Department are challenging and require
serious dedication to the course material, and the film courses are no
exception. That having been said, we welcome students of any major who
have a genuine interest in learning more about the cinema.
Please note that ENGL 221 (Literature and Film) is the only film-related
course that fulfills the General Education IB requirement.
The Core Classes:
ENGL
220: Introduction to Film. 4 hours credit.
In this course, you will learn the basic language of film,
including terms like mise-en-scene and tracking shot;
gain some basic knowledge about various histories and genres
of film; and learn how to analyze a film in both the essay
format as well as more informal in-class discussions.
Although not required, students new to film would benefit
from taking this course first (particularly those in the
concentration). Prerequisite: C or better in
ENGL 102 or 103. NOTE: Cannot receive credit for both
ENGL 121 and ENGL 220.
ENGL
402: Film History. 4 hours credit.
What are the origins of the medium of film, and how has it
developed into the contemporary cinema? Students in
this course will begin with the earliest examples of the
medium and survey several of the major periods, including
German Expressionism, Soviet Montage, Classical Hollywood,
Italian Neorealism, and the French New Wave. Although
one course cannot hope to cover every development in cinema
in the past century, students should leave this course with
a larger sense of some of the major film periods and
movements. Prerequisite: C or better in
ENGL 102 or 103.
Four hours per week. NOTE: Cannot receive credit for both
ENGL 321 and ENGL 402.
ENGL
403: Film Genre. 4 hours credit. Students in this
course will study the concept of genre and explore several varieties,
including comedy, musicals, westerns, and science fiction. While this
course is not historical per se, students will be encouraged to consider how
films are constantly reshaping themselves as they respond to--and
challenge--the demands of their particular genre. Prerequisite:
C or better in ENGL
102 or 103.
Four hours per week.
ENGL
404: International Cinema. 4 hours credit. To what
extent does a narrative film represent its own culture, and how does it
engage in representations perhaps different (perhaps not) than ones we are
more familiar with? Students in this course will study cinemas from
Italy, Japan, New Zealand, and many other nations and cultures. They
should leave this course with a better appreciation of cinemas outside their
native context. Prerequisite: C or better in ENGL
102 or 103.
Four
hours per week.
ENGL
405: Major Film Directors.
4 hours credit. What do
directors do, and why, when speaking of a film, do we so often discuss its
director as its main creative author (or to use the term more specific to
film, auteur)? What are the potential values--and the potential
problems--of the idea of a film auteur? This course explores
some of the major ideas about film through many of the medium's most famous
directors, including Alfred Hitchcock, François Truffaut, Agnes Varda,
and Spike Lee. Prerequisite: C or better in
ENGL
102 or
103.
Four hours per week.
ENGL
408: Film Theory. 4 hours credit.
To borrow the title of André Bazin's famous study, What is
the cinema? How does it create meaning, and how have
different bodies of theory been used to answer that
question? Students in this course will study a variety
of different theoretical perspectives, including
psychoanalysis, realism, auteurism, feminism, gender
studies, queer theory, investigations of race, and
postcolonial theories. Prerequisite: C or
better in ENGL
102 or
103.
Four hours per week.
Special Topics Courses
The English Department also offers special-topics courses
in film. These
courses change from semester to semester and are not offered in the regular cycle. Consult
the most recent course catalog or the English Department to verify whether or
not a
course is being offered.
Past Special
Topics Courses
Spring 2008:
ENGL 494/CMAT 490:
Film Noir.
4 hours credit.
The class is
cross-listed as having English and Communications discussion sections.
As well as exploring stylistic and thematic patterns associated with film
noir, we will analyze how the genre has historically depicted issues of
gender, race, and class. We will discuss the resonance of these
representations in terms of American society and media industries. Much of
the course will be devoted to examples of noir from the Classic Hollywood
period (such as the Big Heat (1953)) before moving on to examples of
neo-noir and revisionist noir (such as The Man Who Wasn't There
(2001)). Students are required to develop a research paper and a brief class
presentation. Students who enroll in a discussion section (of either CMAT
490 or ENGL 494) will automatically be enrolled in the film
lecture/screening on Monday 7:00 - 9:45pm in Henson 243.
ENGL 401: Studies in Documentary.
4 hours
credit. What does it mean for a film to be a documentary?
To what extent do documentaries objectively report, and to what extent do
they passionately persuade? While students in this course will learn some
of the basic history, the approach will be
primarily speculative and theoretical, as we learn how both filmmakers and
viewers negotiate the difficult territory of representing reality.
(This course is not a production course, and though we welcome students with
production background, you need not have it.) Prerequisite: C or better in ENGL
102 or 103. Four hours per week.
Other Courses: General
Education
The following course is not part of the Film
Concentration but may be of interest to our film students. Generally, it
is a non-majors course, as it is the only film-related course currently that
fulfills the General Education 1-A requirement for the third Literature course.
(As an English Major in the Film Concentration, you need not worry about the
Gen-Ed 1-A requirement, as the major fulfills it.)
ENGL 221: Literature and Film.
4 hours credit.
What are the processes by which a play, novel, or short story becomes a
film? How might we think about those processes in terms of how they
reflect their mediums, their cultures, and their historical moments?
Students in this course will study film adaptations of Shakespeare,
Victorian novels such as Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility, and
more recent work such as The Virgin Suicides and The Silence of
the Lambs. Prerequisite: C or better in ENGL
102 or
103.
Two hours lecture, two hours screening per week. Meets General
Education IB.
Courses Outside the English Department
Students should also be aware that other
departments offer courses related to film (or dealing directly with film) on a
regular basis. The Communication Arts Department has
courses in production, for those of you who would like practical experience in
video and audio production, and CMAT also offers courses in media studies more
broadly considered. We have had students in the past do double-majors, in
fact, or some combination of majors and minors. The History Department
regularly offers History and Film, and Modern Languages also offers regular
courses involving cinema. Consult the course catalog for more information
(as well as the course offerings for an upcoming semester), and email individual
professors if you have further questions regarding a specific course.
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