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FILM2003 European Cinemas, European Societies

Later Year Course

Offered By School of Cultural Inquiry
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Film Studies
Offered in First Semester, 2012
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

The course examines how selected postwar European cinema movements and filmmakers have used film as a way to represent the past. The main focus is on issues - aesthetic, cultural and industrial - arising from the representation of history in film. Chronologically the course extends from a retrospective view of Stalinism in Burnt by the Sun to the present; it also includes films whose historical contexts are still of particular significance. The interplay between fact, fiction and memory foregrounds the role of film in creating or perpetuating cultural myths via historical themes. Discourses addressed include national identities, the aestheticisation of fascism and the limits of representation. The course will combine the symbolic dimension of (political) history with the social dimension of (film) art. In this it complements Postwar European Cinema: Films and Directors (FILM2004).

Learning Outcomes

On satisfying requirements for this course students will have gained:

  1. refinement of skills in analysing films as texts;
  2. an introduction to a body of films challenging the global dominance of Hollywood;
  3. an awareness of issues relating to national vis-a-vis transnational cinema movements, 'European' vs. 'local';
  4. insight into the interrelationship between film and history, in the European context.

 

Indicative Assessment

One 1500 - 2000 word critical essay, due mid-semester, weighted 45%; a second 1500-2000 word critical essay, due end of semester, weighted 55%.

Workload

One 1-hour lecture, one 1-hour tutorial and a 2-hour film screening per week.

In addition students would be required to spend up to 5 hours per week reviewing films and doing tutorial and other supplementary reading.

Assumed Knowledge and
Required Skills
Students will be assumed to have a basic knowledge of film analysis and of film genres gained in FILM1002 and FILM1003.
Requisite Statement

For Film Studies major, Intro to Film Studies FILM1002 and Intro to Film Genres FILM1003, or two courses from the Faculty of Arts or permission of the Coordinator.

There is no language prerequisite. Films not in English are subtitled.

Recommended Courses History on Film, HIST2136
Prescribed Texts Reading brick prepared by lecturer.
Preliminary Reading

Forbes, Jill and Street, Sarah, European Cinema: An Introduction.

Majors/Specialisations Film Studies and Contemporary Europe
Academic Contact Dr Roger Hillman

The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.

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