ENGL A148H: Film As Literature Honors
Item | Value |
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Curriculum Committee Approval Date | 12/06/2023 |
Top Code | 150300 - Comparative Literature |
Units | 3 Total Units |
Hours | 54 Total Hours (Lecture Hours 54) |
Total Outside of Class Hours | 0 |
Course Credit Status | Credit: Degree Applicable (D) |
Material Fee | No |
Basic Skills | Not Basic Skills (N) |
Repeatable | No |
Grading Policy | Standard Letter (S),
|
Associate Arts Local General Education (GE) |
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Associate Science Local General Education (GE) |
|
California General Education Transfer Curriculum (Cal-GETC) |
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Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum (IGETC) |
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California State University General Education Breadth (CSU GE-Breadth) |
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Course Description
Read, analyze, and write on international and American films. Critically examine the philosophical, cultural, mythic, religious, and/or historical elements related to film. Explore the styles in individual works and the commentary made on moral, social, and aesthetic issues. Enrollment Limitation: ENGL A148; students who complete ENGL A148H may not enroll in or receive credit for ENGL A148. ADVISORY: ENGL C1000. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC.
Course Level Student Learning Outcome(s)
- Write Analytical arguments about film and its influences.
Course Objectives
- 1. View and demonstrate an understanding of American and international film cinematic literature.
- 2. Identify and examine the philosophical, cultural, mythic, religious, and/or historical elements that are represented in cinematic literature.
- 3. Learn to closely in order to recognize and interpret the literary devices and cinematic styles in film literature. Appreciate how these elements make each work a representation of an individual directors artistic sensibility.
- 4. Examine the influence of different gender, economic, cultural, racial, and/or ethnic groups on cinematic literature.
- 5. Recognize how individual works of cinematic literature reflect and comment on moral, social, and aesthetic issues.
- 6. Write a minimum of 3000 words about cinematic literature: (a) a minimum of 2000 words of the writing must be in the form of analytical essays, (b) the other writings may be in the form of tests requiring primarily short and/or long essay responses, journal writings, creative modeling of the cinematic literature explored.
Lecture Content
Introduction to Film as Literature Discussion of formal elements in film and in literature. Film Criticism Research methods and reading analysis of film reviews and professional articles about film. Film and other genres: comparison and contrast A discussion of the relationship between film and other arts and disciplines.
Method(s) of Instruction
- Lecture (02)
- DE Live Online Lecture (02S)
- DE Online Lecture (02X)
Instructional Techniques
Lecture and application of ideas, discussion, instructor feedback on written papers and discussion, peer feedback.
Reading Assignments
.
Writing Assignments
Write a minimum of 3000 words about cinematic literature: (a) a minimum of 2000 words (10 pages) of the writing must be in the form of analytical essays, (b) the other writings may be in the form of tests requiring primarily short and/or long essay responses, journal writings, creative modeling of the literature, written notes outlining oral presentations, written scripts for film/video presentations, or other types of writings that demonstrate an understanding of the literature.
Out-of-class Assignments
.
Demonstration of Critical Thinking
Written essays and discussions.
Required Writing, Problem Solving, Skills Demonstration
Write a minimum of 3000 words about cinematic literature: (a) a minimum of 2000 words (10 pages) of the writing must be in the form of analytical essays, (b) the other writings may be in the form of tests requiring primarily short and/or long essay responses, journal writings, creative modeling of the literature, written notes outlining oral presentations, written scripts for film/video presentations, or other types of writings that demonstrate an understanding of the literature.
Eligible Disciplines
English: Masters degree in English, literature, comparative literature, or composition OR bachelors degree in any of the above AND masters degree in linguistics, TESL, speech, education with a specialization in reading, creative writing, or journalism OR the equivalent. Masters degree required.
Other Resources
1. Selected literary American and international films 2. Anthologies of essays, especially film criticism. 3. Excerpts from published articles made available to students through library reserve.