Spring 2024
FILM 171 002 - LEC 002
Special Topics in Film Genre
Our Others, Our Selves: Race, Gender, and Technologies of the Body in Contemporary Science Fiction Cinema
Emily Catherine West
Class #:31239
Units: 4
Instruction Mode:
In-Person Instruction
Offered through
Film and Media
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
0
Enrolled: 45
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 45
Waitlist Max: 15
Open Reserved Seats:
1 reserved for All New and Continuing Transfer Students
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
THU, MAY 9TH
08:00 am - 11:00 am
Dwinelle 188
Other classes by Emily Catherine West
Course Catalog Description
The study of films as categorized either by industry-identified genres (westerns, horror films, musicals, film noir, etc.) or broader interpretive modes (melodrama, realism, fantasy, etc.).
Class Description
Science fiction is a highly political genre, historically rooted in Western colonial expansion and directly expressive of imperialist desire and anxiety. This course aims to illuminate the ways in which science fiction film constructs its Others through scenes of encounter that mobilize ideologies of race, class, and gender in complex and contradictory ways. Beginning with the Alien franchise in the late 1970s, we will chart a course through the recent history of American and international science fiction that examines narratives of otherness in settings that are both fantastic and everyday. Encounters with literally or symbolically racialized aliens dominate the films of the first unit. From here, we move through a series of dystopian and utopian presents and futures, interrogating how contemporary science fiction dramatizes the precarity of racialized neoliberal laborers, the racial and gender identities of artificial intelligences, and the racial politics of both surveillance and reproductive futurism. Throughout, students will examine how film texts engage in ongoing cultural conversations about the formulation and reformulation of identity, often by exploring the flexible, contested boundaries between human and nonhuman, self and other, organism and machine, past and future. Course texts come from film studies as well as psychoanalysis, queer theory, science and technology studies, political theory and anthropology; they model intersectional understandings of the constitution of body and identity as site of both oppression and resistance.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
Open Reserved Seats:
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials