Timeroom: Fall 2022

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Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 533 (01) - Introduction to Film Studies

Introduction to Film Studies

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 11079
A survey of the international development of the motion picture from the silent period to the present, emphasizing film's narrative practices. Introduces students to the study of the art, history, technology, economics, and theory of cinema. Films and film makers of various nations, periods, movements, and genres examined. Mandatory weekly screenings in addition to class. Students cannot receive credit for both ENGL 533 and CMN 550.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Equivalent(s): CMN 550, ENGL 533H, ENGL 533W
Attributes: Humanities(Disc)
Instructors: Delia Konzett
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 3:40pm - 5:00pm HS G34
Additional Course Details: 

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A survey of the international development of film from the early and silent periods to the present. The course examines films and filmmakers from various nations, periods, movements, and genres, including German Expressionism, Soviet Montage, French New Wave, American Independent Cinema, film noir, documentary, avant-garde, and music video. Special attention will be given to the Classical Hollywood system as well as methods of close formal analysis based on the critical and technical vocabulary of the field. Topics will explore the narrative and ideological practices of cinema and how they establish, revise, and subvert filmic conventions. Other topics include film history, economic/commercial aspects of the film industry, and basic film theory. We will also discuss film as both an artistic and popular medium. 

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 533 (02) - Introduction to Film Studies

Introduction to Film Studies

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 10780
A survey of the international development of the motion picture from the silent period to the present, emphasizing film's narrative practices. Introduces students to the study of the art, history, technology, economics, and theory of cinema. Films and film makers of various nations, periods, movements, and genres examined. Mandatory weekly screenings in addition to class. Students cannot receive credit for both ENGL 533 and CMN 550.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Equivalent(s): CMN 550, ENGL 533H, ENGL 533W
Attributes: Humanities(Disc)
Instructors: Matthias Konzett
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 5:10pm - 6:30pm HS G34
Additional Course Details: 

marlon brando the godfather gif | WiffleGif

A survey of the international development of film from the early and silent periods to the present. The course examines films and filmmakers from various nations, periods, movements, and genres, including German Expressionism, Soviet Montage, French New Wave, American Independent Cinema, film noir, documentary, avant-garde, and music video. Special attention will be given to the Classical Hollywood system as well as methods of close formal analysis based on the critical and technical vocabulary of the field. Topics will explore the narrative and ideological practices of cinema and how they establish, revise, and subvert filmic conventions. Other topics include film history, economic/commercial aspects of the film industry, and basic film theory. We will also discuss film as both an artistic and popular medium. 

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 534 (01) - 21st Century Journalism: How the News Works

21st Century Journalism

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 11859
This class explores ways new technology, including social media, has affected the practice of journalism, and examines journalism past and present. Students discuss libel law, ethics and how to define plagiarism in the digital age. This survey is meant not only to lay a foundation for prospective journalists, but also to provide a broad understanding of the news media for those interested in how the news works.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Environment,Tech&Society(Disc)
Instructors: Tom Haines
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 11:10am - 12:30pm HS 130
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 534 (02) - 21st Century Journalism: How the News Works

21st Century Journalism

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   40  
CRN: 13096
This class explores ways new technology, including social media, has affected the practice of journalism, and examines journalism past and present. Students discuss libel law, ethics and how to define plagiarism in the digital age. This survey is meant not only to lay a foundation for prospective journalists, but also to provide a broad understanding of the news media for those interested in how the news works.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Environment,Tech&Society(Disc)
Instructors: Tom Haines
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 11:10am - 12:30pm HS 130
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 534 (03) - 21st Century Journalism: How the News Works

21st Century Journalism

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 16842
This class explores ways new technology, including social media, has affected the practice of journalism, and examines journalism past and present. Students discuss libel law, ethics and how to define plagiarism in the digital age. This survey is meant not only to lay a foundation for prospective journalists, but also to provide a broad understanding of the news media for those interested in how the news works.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Environment,Tech&Society(Disc)
Instructors: Mei-Ling McNamara
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 MW 2:10pm - 3:30pm HS 104
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 602 (01) - Advanced Professional and Technical Writing

Adv Professional & Tech Writ

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 14155
An advanced writing course focusing on writing in a global and technological workplace. In addition to fluency in the documents of the workplace, students focus on visual rhetoric in a technological environment through web design and usability while studying the issues of globalism, ethics, and the environment that affect all professional writing today.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Writing Intensive Course
Instructors: Molly Campbell
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 MW 2:10pm - 3:30pm HS 340
Additional Course Details: 

ENGL 602 is a required course for English: TBD majors. 

ENGL 602 may be taken as an upper level elective by general English majors. 

Manchester   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 602 (M1) - Advanced Professional and Technical Writing

Adv Professional & Tech Writ

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - UNHM Credit (15 weeks) (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 15080
An advanced writing course focusing on writing in a global and technological workplace. In addition to fluency in the documents of the workplace, students focus on visual rhetoric in a technological environment through web design and usability while studying the issues of globalism, ethics, and the environment that affect all professional writing today.
Section Comments: Cross listed with ET 625
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Cross listed with : ET 625.M1
Only listed majors in section: PROF&TECH CMN
Attributes: Writing Intensive Course, Scheduled meeting time, Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Samantha Donnelly
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 W 6:01pm - 9:00pm ONLINE
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 605 (01) - Intermediate Linguistic Analysis

Intermediate Linguistic Analys

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 10330
Introduces analysis methods and problem solving in phonology, morphology, and syntax using data from many languages. Emphasis will be both practical (learning how to describe the grammar and sound system of a language) and theoretical (understanding languages' behavior). Prereq: ENGL 405/LING 405, or permission. (Also offered as LING 605.)
Section Comments: Also listed as LING 605.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Equivalent(s): LING 605
Instructors: Rochelle Lieber
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 2:10pm - 3:30pm HS 108
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 616D (01) - Studies in Film/Narrative and Style

Stdy in Film/Narrative & Style

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 14156
Advanced, focused study of the narrative, dramatic, and poetic practices of cinema, within one of four possible subject areas: A) Genre; B) Authorship; C) Culture and Ideology; D) Narrative and Style. Precise issues and methods may vary, ranging from general and specific considerations of how a given subject area involves film theory, criticism, and history, to its use in diverse analyses of selected national cinemas, periods, movements, and filmmakers. May be repeated for credit barring duplication of topic. Barring duplication of material taken for credit in CMN 650, course may be repeated for credit. Detailed course descriptions available in the English department office.
Section Comments: Special Topic: Global Horror
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated up to unlimited times.
Equivalent(s): AMST 605, ENGL 616
Attributes: Writing Intensive Course
Instructors: Matthias Konzett
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 3:40pm - 5:00pm HS G35
Additional Course Details: 

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This course explores a contemporary understanding of the horror genre, expressing global anxieties pertaining to housing, shelter, climate, media and mass control, pandemics and biohazards, social psychosis, and out-of-control capitalism and consumerism. The course focuses on the nature of dwelling or inhabiting a domestic space, a social space, a cultural space, and the global habitat in a variety of well-known horror films. The films will show its protagonists unsettled, dislocated, or not at home in one way or another. We will try to understand these scenarios of haunted spaces and living locations both as forms of entertainment and expressions of symptoms of social decline and decay. We will also consider the art and expertise of filmmaking that went into the production of these films, particularly production design, editing, and cinematography. Films in the first part of the semester, focusing more on US cinema, will include The Lighthouse (2019), Candyman (1992), Night of the Living Dead (1968), The Shining (1980), The Exorcist (1973), Silence of the Lambs  (1991), Hereditary (2018), Get Out (2017), and Midsommar  (2019). Films in the second part of the semester will extend to foreign films such as The Host (2006), Oldboy (2003), 28 Days Later (2002), Train to Busan (2016), and the more comedic films An American Werewolf in London (1981) and What We Do in the Shadows (2014). Note: Students who have difficulties with horror films due to its graphic depiction of violence should not enroll in this class.

ENGL 616D satisfies the Genre requirement for English Literature majors. 

ENGL 616D may be taken as an upper-level elective by general English majors. 

Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 618 (01) - Film Theory

Film Theory

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2022 - Full Term (08/29/2022 - 12/12/2022)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 11146
Examines basic theories of film and their relationship to the practice of close analysis of film. Theories are meant to provide students with a vocabulary for critical analysis and stress the many ways of seeing film.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Matthias Konzett
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/29/2022 12/12/2022 TR 2:10pm - 3:30pm HS G35
Additional Course Details: 

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We will examine basic theories of film and their relationship to the practice of “close analysis.” How do film theorists discuss the experience of film, spectatorship, apparatus, and production in a variety of theoretical contexts and explore major film theories such as those of formalism, realism, auteurism, star/celebrity culture, gender, psychoanalysis, genre, race, cultural and media studies? Theories are meant to provide students with a vocabulary for close analysis of film and will stress the many ways of seeing and experiencing film. Our primary responsibility will be finding ways to speak and write about film and its significance as a complex aesthetic and social sign. Film excerpts, particularly those discussed in the assigned texts, will be screened and discussed in class. 

ENGL 618 satisfies the Genre requirement for English Literature majors and  is a required course for the film minor (Note: LLC  540 offered in Fall 2022 as history of German cinema course does not count as an equivalent of 618 due its limited scope). 

ENGL 618 may be taken as an upper-level elective by general English majors.