Film Studies 247 - AMERICAN CINEMA & CULTURE

Fall
2015
01
4.00
Alexandra Keller
TTh 10:30-11:50; W 07:30-11:00
Smith College
21168-F15
SEELYE 201; SEELYE 201
akeller@smith.edu
This course explores the relationship between film and culture during some of the most crucial decades of "The American Century."  It looks at the evolving connection between films and their audiences, the extent to which films are symptomatic of as well as influential on historical periods, major events and social movements, and the ways in which film genres evolve in relation to both cultural change and the rise and fall of the Hollywood studio system.  Among the questions we'll consider: How did the Depression have an impact on Hollywood film style and form?  How were evolving ideas about American motherhood puzzled out in American cinema of the period?  What were some of the important differences between the way mainstream U.S. cinema and European film represented World War II?  How did Civil Rights and the Red Scare become appropriate topics for Westerns? Did the lighthearted veneer of the fluffy sex comedies of the sixties actually hide some serious questions about labor, independent female subjectivity and heteronormativity?  Particular and sustained attention will be paid to relations among gender, genre, race and class.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.