09.16.2002
Film Studies 289: New Themes in Conflict.
Richard Illarde and staff.
Full Course. M/W/F 10AM.
The study of film -- the
only completely original art form of the 20th century -- has
for too long been governed by dated or archaic terminology, blinkered
pedagogy, and hand-me-down methodologies borrowed from other
liberal arts curricula. At first assembling, as a patchwork suit,
a discourse cribbed from the classical literary themes (Man vs.
Nature, Man vs. Man), it is only recently that film studies have
opened up to address more contemporary themes such as racism,
sexual identity and class struggle.
But is this enough? Film
has its own rhythm, its own language, its own terminology and
terrain. Dr. Illarde's course is intended to give it its own
thematographic agenda, as well. It is appalling that this vital
and dynamic modern artform has in the past been handled so haphazardly
by the universities. He has devised a varied and highly challenging
system of study for education in the medium of contemporary film.
He is confident that the acheivement-oriented student will respond
well to the competitive character of the course.
SECTION ONE: "Identity
in Crisis". In the first and most basic section of the
program, the course focuses on one of the preeminent themes of
contemporary film: the diffusion and confusion of identity in
post-modern culture. Aspects covered in this section include
gender confusion (boy poses as girl to get close to babe; girl
poses as boy to play sports; and a special blue paper on religious
and gender roles, working from Dr. Illarde's seminal The Yentl
Paradigm), racial disporia (white guys who act black; black
guys who act white; and Asian guys who act black or white), and
the controversial "cool-acting old people" subgenre.
Special focus is paid to the body-switching genre of the late
1980s and early 1990s. (Note: students of television studies
are directed to Dr. Francesca Coco's "Three's Company and
Modern Memory" course, Cultural Studies 301.)
SECTION TWO: "Property
and Propriety". The second section examines how the
language of film embodies our culture's attitudes towards private
property and social norms. This section takes up the body of
the course, as it is only natural that the fluid and dynamic
medium of film is especially well-suited to address our ever-changing
mores and manners. The main themes addressed here will be America
and the automobile (driving them really fast; tricking them out
with awesome gadgets; blowing them up), public space vs. private
space (hanging out; full frontal nudity in; blowing them up),
and the crossing of moral lines, with a particular emphasis on
the "Rebellious Outsider Seeking Acceptance Defies Honor
Code of Entrenched Organization" genre. For returning students,
please note that your required viewing has changed for the "ragtag
band of misfits save the world by blowing up a large object"
paper.
SECTION THREE: "Social
Ties in a Fragmented World". The final section of this
iconoclastic, groundbreaking class concentrates on the establishment
of friendships, affinity groups and kinship ties in a society
alternately reduced by multiculturalism and homogenized by monoculture.
These seemingly contradictory trends are reconciled by two disparate
but ultimately unified objectives: the "Uniting Outsider"
theme, where a trickster figure from beyond the experience of
his peers at first divides and outrages, then later unites and
overjoys, a community, usually through the medium of dance, sports,
pop music, or homosexuality; and the "Dramaturgicical Dyad"
theme, where two individuals -- pitted against societal strictures
in their own way, but from tendentially opposing backgrounds
(cop/criminal, child/adult, nun/hooker, black person/normal person,
attractive person/smart person, etc.) somehow unite to oppose
a common threat. For the latter theme we will focus narrowly
on the bodies of work of Tom Hanks and Oliver Stone.
Note to incoming students: Despite a misprint in the 2002
Fall Schedule, this course is Dr. Illarde's only offering this
semester. However, in Spring of 2003, he will once again be offering
"Speak, Poseidon: The Immersion of Authority Figures in
Bodies of Water" (Film Studies 351).
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