About

18 Jan 2010 by admin, Comments Off

ENG3940H: Topics in Film: The Cinema of Fear, Anxiety, and Paranoia
Spring 2010, Baruch College, the City University of New York

Professor: Mikhail Gershovich, Ph.D.
Email: Mikhail [dot] Gershovich [at] baruch [dot] cuny [dot] edu
Office: Rm. 317, Annex Building (137 E. 25th St.)
Office hours: TBA and by appointment
Course meeting times: TTh 4:10-5:25pm; optional screenings: Th, 6pm.
Location: Rm. 611, 17 Lexington Ave. (23rd St. building)

This course will explore representations and manifestations of fear, anxiety, and paranoia in American films between the end of WWII and the present. We will consider the ways in which films speak to broader cultural anxieties particular to specific historical moments. We will likewise explore the ways in which the stylistic and aesthetic means of representing fear and anxiety on screen have evolved over the medium’s history. Viewing will include a variety of films across periods and genres including Pickup on South Street, Rear Window, Dawn of the Dead (Romero and Snyder versions), The Conversation, and The Manchurian Candidate (Frankenheimer and Demme versions). Readings will include works of social history as well as theoretical texts on spectatorship, the psychology of fear and paranoia, film genres, and film aesthetics; they will facilitate a critical exploration of the complex ways popular films are informed by, play on, and reinforce prevailing fears and anxieties.

Course Learning Goals
In this course, students will:

1) become familiar with key principles of film studies

2) develop a critical vocabulary for film analysis

3) engage the complex interplay between commercial films and cultural norms, mores, and anxieties

4) explore the nature of spectator experience and the means through which films are able evoke visceral experience and emotional responses, particularly fright, anxiety, and disgust

Comments are closed.

Reading Mulvey

Reading Mulvey

For Tuesday I’ve asked you to read British film theorist Laura Mulvey‘s hugely important and influential 1975 essay, “Visual Pleasure

Blogging Assignment and Posting Schedule

As I noted on the syllabus, participation on this blog, both posting and commenting, counts towards your participation grade. So,

Welcome to ENG3940H

Welcome to ENG3940H

Welcome to the online home of ENG3940H: Topics in Film: The Cinema of Fear, Anxiety and Paranoia. Make yourself at