2024 Spring FILM 170 002 LEC 002

Spring 2024

FILM 170 002 - LEC 002

Formerly Film and Media 140

Special Topics in Film

Cinema and the Anthropocene

Emily Catherine West

Jan 16, 2024 - May 03, 2024
Tu, Th
09:30 am - 10:59 am
Class #:31233
Units: 4

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Offered through Film and Media

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 2
Enrolled: 33
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 35
Waitlist Max: 10
Open Reserved Seats:0

Hours & Workload

0 to 3 hours of instructional experiences requiring special laboratory equipment and facilities per week, 3 hours of instructor presentation of course materials per week, and 9 to 6 hours of outside work hours per week.

Final Exam

WED, MAY 8TH
11:30 am - 02:30 pm
Dwinelle 188

Other classes by Emily Catherine West

Course Catalog Description

Selected topics in the study of film.

Class Description

What is “The Anthropocene?” What do we do with it? How do we live through it? How do we use this concept to expand our understanding of deep time and human agency? To expand our awareness of interspecies relational entanglements? To intensify our commitments to social and environmental justice? How have filmmakers of the late 20th and early 21stcenturies begun to work through these questions – and what might we learn from their attempts to imagine human impacts on our planet? In this course, we’ll begin by reading a few texts that define “the anthropocene” and explore its geological and cultural dimensions. We won’t engage much with debates about when it starts or how to attribute its effects; this is an enormous field of scholarship covered in courses in other departments! Our interest, as film and media scholars, is in tracing how films formally and narratively represent concepts that have emerged within and alongside scholarship in the ecological humanities and social sciences: critiques of the extractive logics of racial capitalism, of the slow violence effected by environmental exploitation and degradation, of the stories “we” tell about the landscapes of particular geographic regions. We will trace the effects and politics of films that image landscapes defined, at least in part, by their place in stories of extraction, contamination, and ruin. A note on the course format: This course will run as a seminar. Emily will teach for the first 5 weeks, while the rest of the course forms research and presentation groups focused on particular topics within the scholarly literature – and specific films with which they pair. After week 5, these groups will run the course every week: presenting the main claims of course texts and leading discussion of stimulating passages, introducing the film during our screening period, and leading discussion on the film, including close formal analysis of specific sequences, in the next course period. This will be, after a certain point, a student-led course. Please enroll only if you are prepared to fully participate in this environment: to lead and to collaborate as your best self.

Rules & Requirements

Repeat Rules

Requirements class fulfills

Meets Arts & Literature, L&S Breadth
Meets the Humanities & Environment Course Thread

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

No Reserved Seats

Textbooks & Materials

See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.

Textbook Lookup

Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials

eTextbooks

Associated Sections