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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course fosters critical taste in film. Students will explore the role of film in contemporary society by viewing and discussing documentaries, experimental films, impressionistic films, animated films and commercial films.
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3.00 Credits
This course presents the multiple views of women as seen through the cinema, with examples from literature as well. Students will encounter varied attitudes toward self, beauty, socialization, exploitation and destiny of 20th century women.
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 2.000 Lecture hours 2.000 Lab hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Literature, Open/Free, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
In this advanced film course, students undertake an intensive study of Hitchcock's work with analysis from cultural, social, literary, philosophical, and cinematic perspectives. Students will view and discuss at least 16 of the legendary director's 53 films.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines documentary (nonfiction) films as a separate cinematic genre with special emphasis on aesthetic criteria as well as on technological understanding. Students, working in groups, will make a documentary film or video. The class fosters an historic understanding of the development of the documentary.
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 2.000 Lecture hours 2.000 Lab hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Literature, Open/Free, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
Through works primarily by women in several genres from a variety of times and places, this course will explore multiple definitions of love and examine love's role, as presented in literature, in women's lives and relationships.
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3.00 Credits
Presenting women's lives, primarily in women's words, through biography, autobiography, journals, letters, poetry and fiction, this course includes women from all walks of life, famous, infamous, and previously unknown, exploring both historic and imaginative limits and possibilities for women. Students will develop critical perspectives on uses of literary sources and will apply what they learn to contemporary women's lives.
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3.00 Credits
Using texts ranging from the Bible and Homer's epics to contemporary literary works, this course introduces mythological approaches to such subjects as heroism, place, time, family, and human nature.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines female figures including goddesses, priestesses, heroines, and other fictional and legendary humans, as they appear in mythic literature; special attention will be given to religious, psychological, literary, archetypal, and global linkage. Works studied may include familiar authors from the European and American classical traditions as well as modern treatments of mythic literature from Native American, Asian, South American, Indian, or other literary heritages.
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