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Course Details

Summer 2012ENGL 363.1MW11:00 - 1:45RH301 Scott Balcerzak

Title: LITERATURE AND FILM

Course Description: The relationship between film and literature, with specific attention to the aesthetic impact of narrative, drama, and poetry on film and to the significance in film of romanticism, realism, and expressionism as literary modes. The nature and history of the adaptation of literary works to film.

PRQ:

Detailed Course Description:

This class provides an overview of some of the major approaches to the study of film and literature – addresses issues of visual and verbal language, adaptation, narrative structure, authorship, and cultural myths.  Through classroom lecture and discussion, the goal is to develop a deeper understanding of not only film as a storytelling medium, but also literature’s role within the age of cinema.  During the last part of the term, special focus will be paid to detective fiction and popular adaptations. 

 

Course Requirements:

Short weekly reading/viewing response assignments; Two 5-7 page papers; out-of-class viewing of assigned films; Final Exam

 

Required Texts:

Bernard Dick.  Anatomy of Film.  5th or 6th Ed.  (Bedford/St. Martin); Arthur Conan Doyle. The Hound of the Baskervilles (Broadview Press); Franz Kafka. The Trial (Oxford World Classics); Graham Greene. The Third Man (Penguin); Dashiell Hammett. The Maltese Falcon. (Vintage Press).; TBA e-reserve readings

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