Course Template
The following information should be available to students as a part
of all syllabi for this course.
Course
Information
Number:
ENGL 5109
Section:
Catalog Name: Film as Literature
Instructor
sub-title (optional) |
Instructor
Information
Instructor's
name:
Office Location:
Office hours:
Phone/email: |
Required
texts and other readings/materials
- Individual instructors
may assemble a group of texts that will allow students to meet the objectives
and specifications of the course. No specific texts are required.
Course
description
- An examination
of films as texts through historical, aesthetic, thematic, and/or cultural
questioning and analysis. Typical offerings may include Film and the
Novel; Representations of War in Film; Film Censorship and the Marketplace;
etc. May be repeated for credit as topic varies.
- A further specific
description pertaining to this section of the course may be added.
Graduate
Course Goals
- Students will
be able to demonstrate an in-depth understanding of films as texts.
- Students will
gain an enhanced knowledge of the ways in which film employs the aesthetic
and cultural techniques of other literary forms.
- Students will
show comprehension and an application of theoretical and critical foundations
for the interpretation of film, including an understanding of the distinctive
qualities of the medium as well as the ways in which film employs the
aesthetic and cultural techniques of other literary forms.
- Students will
understand that social, political, economic, and historical influences
affect the production and consumption of film texts.
- Students will
produce annotated bibliography and/or oral presentation of 10-12 secondary
sources.
- Students will
reveal in both oral and written work a discipline-specific critical
facility through convincing and well-supported analysis of course-related
material.
- Students will
display their command of academic English and of the tenets of sound
composition by means of thesis-driven analytical prose, including at
least 12-15 pages of research-based writing.
- Students will
be capable of conducting independent and meaningful course-related research
and of synthesizing it in the form of a correctly documented research
paper prepared according to current professional standards.
Graduate
Program Goals
- This course prepares
students to complete successfully the comprehensive oral examination
that is required for all M.A. degree candidates.
- This course provides
students with literary, historical, and critical contexts related to
texts on the department's required reading list.
- Oral presentations
in the course strengthen students' presentation skills and prepare them
further for the oral comprehensive examination which is required for
the M.A. degree.
- Gaining further
knowledge of texts in this area strengthens students' content area knowledge,
prepares them for taking nationally recognized standardized examinations
(such as the advanced GRE subject examination in English), and further
prepares them for careers in teaching, writing, and business or advanced
graduate-level study.
General
topics and assignments appropriate to those topics
- To be determined
by instructor.
Assessment
activities
- To be determined
by instructor.
Other
policies
- Departmental
plagiarism policies
- Other policy statements
specific to this class should be included on the syllabus.
- A detailed calendar
of readings and assignments should be made available to the class at
the first class meeting. A copy should be posted electronically and
kept on file in the English department office.
- Students should
be expected to come to class, prepared and able to participate.
- MLA style should
be emphasized and required on out of class essays.
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