ENGL 270

Spring 2021 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 3 hours.

Introduction to the study of the dominant genres or types U.S. cinema. Examines the elements that constitute genres (such as visual and narrative patterns), the formation and reshaping of genres by filmmakers and the entertainment industry, the social and cultural factors that influence the genre cycles and subgenres, and the landmark works of each genre. The course treats several genres in historical perspective or focus on a single genre.

May be repeated in separate terms up to 6 hours if topics vary.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

Humanities – Lit & Arts
ENGL 270 class schedule data for spring 2021
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
61765
Online
S
2:00PM -3:50PM
TR
n.a.
Hansen, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/25/21-05/05/21
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts course.
Section Info:
Hitchcock: Alfred Hitchcock and the Perverse Ethics of the Suspense Film Why do we like to be frightened by film? Why do we enjoy the feeling of anxiety produced by suspenseful movies? By focusing on the films that Alfred Hitchcock directed between 1940 and 1960, this course will explore the psychoanalytic and ideological fears that animate some of the most talked about texts in cinema history. Framed by the historical horrors of World War II and the subsequent expansion of American economic and military power, the films of Hitchcock’s most fertile period helped to develop—and simultaneously to conceal—psychological concerns about modern masculinity, sadism, masochism, consumer culture, and, most of all, the cold war. By interrogating films ranging from “Rebecca” to “Vertigo” and “Psycho,” we will attempt to engage not only with the manifest messages of Hitchcock’s cinema, but also with the latent and troubling fears about our society and ourselves that his cinema seems to embody.
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