Film & Media Studies 351 - Cinema and Everyday Life

Fall
2015
01
4.00
Amelie Hastie
MW 02:00PM-03:20PM; SUSU 57600 68400-6480075600
Amherst College
FAMS-351-01-1516F
KECC 8; FAYEyFAYE 115y115
ahastie@amherst.edu
ENGL-381-01,FAMS-351-01

(Offered as ENGL 381 and FAMS 351.) Film theorist Siegfried Kracauer declared that some of the first films showed “life at its least controllable and most unconscious moments, a jumble of transient, forever dissolving patterns accessible only to the camera.” This course will explore the ways contemporary narrative films aesthetically represent everyday life–capturing both its transience and our everyday ruminations. We will further consider the ways we incorporate film into our everyday lives through various modes of viewings (the arthouse, the multiplex, the DVD, the mp3), our means of perception, and in the kinds of souvenirs we keep. We will look at films by Chantal Akerman, Robert Altman, Marleen Gorris, Hirokazu Koreeda, Marzieh Makhmalbaf, Terrence Malick, Lynne Ramsay, Tsai Ming-liang, Agnès Varda, Wong Kar-wai, and Andy Warhol. Readings will include work by Roland Barthes, Walter Benjamin, Marlene Dietrich, Sigmund Freud, and various works in film and media studies. Two class meetings and one screening per week.


Not open to first-year students.  Limited to 30 students.  Fall semester.  Professor Hastie.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.