Courses
N.B. Any literature, film, media, or visual arts course
would count towards the ILVS major. In fact, there are no required courses for
the major. However, we have designated some courses as ILVS for they are
exemplarily multi-cultural, comparative, and theoretical.
Course Descriptions
ILVS 51: Art of the
Moving Image
Cross-listed as FMS 20
Exploration of cinema's basic aesthetic characteristics: its stylistic
features, such as editing, cinematography, and sound, as well as its major
narrative and non-narrative forms. Screenings include a variety of films from
the US and abroad that exemplify cinema's myriad forms and styles: mainstream
and avant-garde, fiction and non-fiction, narrative and non-narrative,
black-and-white and color, silent and sound. Discussion of the extent to which
cinema's aesthetic features are shared by television and interactive media such
as video games, as well as what is artistically distinctive about these newer
moving image media. (Category IV-b: Film/Media Theory)
ILVS 52: Global
History of Cinema
Cross-listed as FMS
21
History of cinema beginning with the emergence of the
technologies for making and exhibiting films around 1894 and the major genres of
early cinema (1895-1904); the development of "classical" narrative film in the
US in the 1900s and 1910s; the creation of alternatives to classical cinematic
storytelling in the 1920s in France, Germany, the Soviet Union and elsewhere;
the rise of documentary and experimental film; and the coming of synchronized
sound in the late 1920s. European responses to the increasing political turmoil
in the lead-up to WWII in the 1930s; Japanese popular traditions of
filmmaking, the impact of WWII on film history; the emergence of Italian
Neo-Realism and "modernist" art cinema in the late 1940s and 1950s; the New
Waves of the late 1950s; and political modernist, post-colonial, feminist and
other radical forms of filmmaking that arose in response to the political crises
of the 1960s. Survey of world cinema since the 1970s, focusing on the changes
that have occurred in mainstream Hollywood filmmaking and the work of filmmakers
in Hong Kong and other non-western countries. (Category III-c: Cross-Cultural Film)
ILVS 55: Cultural
History of the Modern Middle East
Cross-listed as ARB 55
A lecture-based introductory survey course on trends and developments in
cultural activities (for example, music, cinema, literature, and the fine arts)
across diverse Middle Eastern cultures, with emphasis on the Arab world, Turkey,
and Iran, from the nineteenth century to the present day. Following these fields
of artistic expression, the course traces a broad trajectory engaging with the
formulation of the concepts of the "modern" and the "traditional" in these arts,
with a focus on themes such as: innovation and reform, political resistance,
revolutionary ideologies, the rural-urban divide, transformations of gender
roles, the rise of youth cultures, new religious movements, and reactions to
consumerism and globalization. (Category III-a, b, or c: Cross-Cultural literature/visual arts/film)
ILVS 57 Hitchcock:
Cinema, Gender, Ideology
Cross-listed as FMS
81, WGSS 50, ENG 80
Studies in the major films of Hitchcock with specific
attention to the relations among popular culture, narrative cinema, and the
social constructions of gender, sexuality, and cultural authority. Emphasis on
various theories of cinema and spectatorial relations (feminist, psychoanalytic,
queer) and close examination of the representational practices that "naturalize"
heterosexual romance in relation to the narrative of "suspense."
Recommendations: ENG 1, 2 REQUIRED or Fulfillment of College Writing
Requirement. (Category II-b: Single Cultural film; III-c: Gender-oriented film, IV-b: Film theory)
ILVS 60:
Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies
An introduction to the major critical and theoretical approaches for the study
of literatures and cultures, especially of foreign cultures. Issues studied
include: How do we analyze cultural productions, whether our own or those of
other societies? What do we learn in comparing texts from different cultures
with each other? What is the value of literature, and how do we define it? How
do cultural productions allow us to understand social issues, and to what extent
does it contribute to social change? How can we be critical yet ethical
producers and consumers of literature and other cultural productions in a world
that is increasingly global? (Category IV-a: Literary theory; IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 63 Arabian
Nights
Cross-listed as ARB
63
A survey of the composition, structure, history, and
importance of the Arabian Nights, the famous tales narrated by Shahrazad during
1001 nights, with selected reading of the most important tales. The
dissemination of the tales and their transmission to other regions of the world
including their impact on other cultures as reflected in writing, art, and film. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 64:
Introduction to Yiddish Culture
Cross-listed as REL 65 and JS 65
An examination of the roots of East European Jewish culture, beginning with a
6000-year survey of the religions of Abraham; a brief examination of the origins
of Judaism, the evolution of Christianity and Islam; the historic migration of
the Jewish people from Asia to Western Europe and eventually to Czarist Russia;
the rise and fall of Yiddish literature; the end of the Shtetl world; and the
American experience. Readings include Sholom Aleichem, Sholem Asch, I. B.
Singer, Bernard Malamud, and Phillip Roth. Stress on universal cultural patterns
and similarities of ethnic experience.
ILVS 65: Travel
Literature: The Arab and Muslim World
Cross-listed as ARB 65
An overview of travel writing as a literary form of expression. Within Arab and
Muslim cultural contexts, analysis of how travel literature expresses
inquisitiveness at the encounter with a different culture. Examines how the
traveler-writer endeavors to decipher this different culture in the light of her
or his own experience and knowledge. Comparison of travel writing from these
regions to the genre in other cultural contexts. Issues such as
tolerance/intolerance, transience/permanence, and universal/particular as they
relate to the literary genres of travel writing in primary and secondary
readings. In English. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 70:
Introduction to Visual Studies
Critical introduction to complexities of images in contemporary cultural
life.
Examination of how visual experience has been conceptualized. Interpretations
from psychology, philosophy, art history, and literary studies. The goal is to
become familiar with fundamental concepts of this capacious interdisciplinary
field, and also to develop a precise and flexible vocabulary of one's own with
which to address the visual. (Category IV-c: Visual theory)
ILVS 71: Love & Sexuality in World Literature
Cross-listed as CIV 71, RUS 71, JPN 71
Representations of love and sexuality in Japanese and Russian
literature. Specific issues to be addressed across a diverse body of
literature, film and art include 1) the fusion of sexuality and
romance, 2) love as a problem versus love as an ideal, 3) societal
conventions as to so-called proper or normative behavior (the
various ways hetero-and homosexuality, celibacy, and hedonism have
been understood and commented upon in artistic media). All
discussions in English. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 72: Television
in the Age of Change
Cross-listed as FMS 165
Examines how new technologies and shifting viewing habits are transforming
television; how storytelling is changing in light of TV’s industrial and
technological evolution and our global, networked, media environment; and how
contemporary viewing habits are reshaping our theories of audiences, styles, and
viewing pleasures. Focuses on story creation, changing genres, programming
conventions and global trends, shifting technologies, social media, TV fans, and
streaming content—and how all these influence television narratives and our
media culture. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural Film/Media)
ILVS 79: Fascism: Then and Now
Cross-listed as GER 79
Comparative study of the various strains and manifestations of
fascism, its history and foundations in social, political, and
religious developments and ideologies; philosophical and historical
concepts through literature, art, myth, and film. The structure of
fascism and fascist iconography. Begins with fascist tendencies in
twentieth-century Europe and Japan and culminates in the present
age. In English. (Category III-a, b, c: Cross-cultural literature / visual arts / film)
ILVS 80: Walter
Benjamin and the Crisis of Experience
Cross-listed as JS 80 and GER 80
Advanced survey of key works by the German literary theorist and cultural
critic, focusing on his theories of experience. Includes the afterlife of the
past; violence, destruction, fate, and law; language, literature, and
translation; reception of Kant, Marx, and Husserl; childhood and memory; and the
uses of theology. Ancillary readings from Goethe, Proust, Baudelaire, Freud,
Brecht, Kafka. May be taken at the 100 level. (Category IV-a, b, c, d: Literary / media / visual / cultural theory)
ILVS 82: Imagining
the Environment: Cross-Cultural Perspectives
Cross-Listed as GER 82 and ENV 82
Compares and contrasts representations of the environment in German culture —
commonly understood to be particularly "Green"— with other European and
Non-European cultures. Focuses on how themes such as sustainability, the toxic
discourse, wilderness, biodiversity, nationalism, postcolonial heritage, and the
global risk society are negotiated in literature, film, and music. May be taken
at the 100 level. In English. (Category IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 83: War Stories
Cross-listed as RUS 75 and PJS 75
Examination of how war has been represented in fiction, non-fiction, memoir,
film, and documentary. Priority given to Russian and East European materials,
supplemented by other European, Asian, and American texts of the 19th and
(mainly) 20th and 21st centuries. Focus on strategies employed by writers,
journalists, historians, and film makers in depicting war in different cultures
and from differing points of view. Operative questions include: challenges of
representing war in a text or onscreen; commonalities and differences in how war
is rendered; and how these questions impact the understanding of conflicts. The
course goal is to develop sophisticated skills for understanding, deciphering,
critiquing and dissecting the ways in which war and conflict are presented, and
to recognize the ideological and aesthetic strategies behind these
representations. All texts and discussion in English. (Category IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 84: Black
Comedy
Cross-listed as ENG 84
Introductory course on relations between comedy and cruelty, laughter and shame,
pleasure and fear, escapism and insult. Examples drawn mainly from film,
but also from fiction, theater, and television. Primary focus not on race,
but some attention to black comedy as comedy by African Americans.
Recommendations: ENG 1, 2 REQUIRED or Fulfillment of College Writing
Requirement. Recommended that the student already have taken either ENG
20,21,22, or 23. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 85: From
Beijing to Bollywood: Cinema of China and India
Cross-listed as ENG
48, FMS 68, and CHNS 83
Comparative perspective on China and India via their
cinematic traditions, related historical contexts, modern cultural production,
and social transformations using selected films and critical essays.
Nationalism, revolution, globalization as film expression. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural film)
ILVS 86: Film and
Nation: Russia and Central Asia
Cross-listed as RUS 85, CIV 85, and
FMS 85
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, Russia and several former Central Asian
republics, now the independent countries of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and
Kyrgyzstan embarked on a nation-building project through cinema; topics
considered: how ethnic and national identities were subsumed into a "Soviet"
identity and then split apart in the post-Soviet period; constructions of new
national identities, national spaces, heroes and myths in films ranging from the
Russian mega-hits Brother and Company 9 to the international festival favorites,
The Adopted Son (Kyrgyzstan) and The Hunter (Kazakhstan); influence of Hollywood
and multi-national productions in historical action films such as Nomad and
Mongol; changes in film styles and genres, as well as in the structure and
economics of the film industry. No prerequisites. All films with English
subtitles. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural film)
ILVS 87: Arab and
Middle Eastern Cinemas
Cross-listed as ARB 57
An overview of the social role of cinema in the Arab world and the broader
Middle East focusing on a historical perspective on the development and
expansion of cinema in these parts of the world, as well as several thematic
windows through which the relationship of cinema to these societies is examined.
In English. (Category III-c: Cross cultural film)
ILVS 88: Warrior
Nations: Russia & U.S.
Cross-listed as RUS 78
Comparative study of how war is central to each nation's identity and to the
narratives in popular culture that help shape it. Focus is thematic, not
chronological, with the course structured around topics, including shared myths
of exceptionalism, points of triumph (how WWII is memorialized in both) and
catastrophic defeat, when the myth of exceptionalism is shattered (Vietnam,
Afghanistan). Other topics include civil war and the cold war. Attention is also
directed to how post-1991 changes impact the connection between exceptionalism
and militarism regarding wars today and the renewed tension between the two in
the dynamics of competing hegemonies. Texts include film, fiction, and popular
history. Course taught in English; no prerequisites. (Category IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 91/92: Special
Topics
Special Topics. Please see departmental website for specific details.
ILVS 100: Classics
of World Cinema
Cross-listed as WL 101 and FMS 86
Worldwide survey of major films from the silent era to the present. Trends in
filmmaking styles and genres; the impact of modern history on cinematic art;
cultural, theoretical, and philosophical issues related to the study of film.
Filmmakers covered may include Eisenstein, Chaplin, Renoir, Welles, DeSica, Ray,
Ozu, Bergman, Fassbinder, Sembene, and Zhang Yimou. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural film)
ILVS 101:
Visualizing Colonialism
Cross-listed as ARB 155, FMS 175, and CST
10
An overview of the intersection between visual culture and the conditions of
colonialism and postcoloniality. Readings and viewings on representations of the
non-Western world in colonial-era painting and photography, leading to an
examination of the history of colonial cinema, and to later postcolonial
visualizations of the colonial period. The development of cinemas of
anti-colonial resistance, and persisting effects of colonialism and empire in
contemporary global visual cultures, including contemporary arts and new media.
Materials drawn from a variety of regional contexts, with special emphasis on
the Arab world. Secondary readings drawn from anti-colonial theorists and
postcolonial studies. In English. (Category III-b, c: Cross cultural visual arts / film; IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 114: Politics &
Literature in Russia & Eastern Europe
Cross-listed as RUS 114
Comparative investigation of the dynamic literary-cultural response to dominant
political forces and ideologies in Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union,
primarily Nazism, Communism and Nationalism. Focus on the writer as political
voice and public conscience. Material from, but not limited to, Russian, Polish,
Czech and Bosnian contexts, primarily in genres of satire and absurdism. Seminar
format. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 118: Haruki
Murakami and World Literature
Cross-listed as JPN 118
Comparative study of Haruki Murakami's literature in the context of World
Literature. How some Western writers' works have shaped Murakami's work. How
literature travels the globe, breaking national boundaries. The writers to be
examined may include, besides Murakami, Kurt Vonnegut, Raymond Chandler, Raymond
Carver, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Franz Kafka, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and
Dostoevsky. Freud, Girard, Karatani, Nietzsche, Damrosch, and others, provide
theoretical insights. Taught in English. No prerequisites. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 122: South
African Writers
Cross-listed as WL 122
Survey of modern South African writers, with emphasis on the effects of
Apartheid and the anti-Apartheid struggle on the life of the imagination,
including literary, film, and theatre evocations of South African life. Writers
may include Alan Paton, Lewis Nkosi, J. M. Coetzee, Agnes Sam, Zoë Wicomb, Athol
Fugard, Njabulo Ndebele, Miriam Tlali, Breyten Breytenbach, Mongane Serote, Ruth
First, Nadine Gordimer, and Besse Head. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 132: Book of Genesis and Its Interpreters
Cross-listed as REL 132, WL 132 and JS 132
A detailed study of the
biblical Book of Genesis and related biblical texts, in their historical
setting, with special attention to the role that Genesis played in postbiblical
religious traditions and in art and literature from early modern times onward.
All texts read in English. (Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 133: Roots of
the Jewish Imagination
Cross-listed as REL
126, WL 126 and JS 126
Jewish myths, legends, mystical
teachings, and other subjects that influenced the formation of Jewish
imaginative literature. Topics include: the journey of the soul; the Book
of Job and why bad things happen to good people; Jewish heresy; Jewish dream
lore; the Messiah and the End of Days; legends of the Golem (android, or
artificial man); the dybbuk (spirit possession) and exorcism; tales and parables
of Kafka; metamorphosis; hunger, food, and eating; the comic book and graphic
novel; the Holocaust and modern trauma; Kabbalah, mysticism, and religious
search; Ju-Bus (Jewish Buddhists); Israelis and Palestinians; women’s experience
in Jewish life. All texts read in English.(Category III-a: Cross-cultural literature)
ILVS 142: Jewish
Experience on Film
Cross-listed as REL
142, FMS 84, WL 142, and JS 142.
Selected classic and contemporary films dealing with
aspects of Jewish experience in America, Europe, and Israel, combined with
reading on the cultural, historical, and philosophical problems illuminated by
each film. One weekly session will be devoted to screenings, the other to
discussion of the films and readings. In English. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural film)
ILVS 144: Popular
Cultures of the Middle East
Cross-listed as ANTH 144
Examines the contemporary Middle East through its popular cultures and
introduces anthropological methods for studying media. Considers multiple
meanings of the "popular" in the course title. Topics include: (1)
non-electronic expressive practices, (2) media such as television, cinema,
music, or websites that may consolidate or contest state power, (3) cultural
forms such as Arab hip-hop that are the product of global processes, some of
which reframe traditional forms, and (4) religious popular cultures.
Recommendations: One course in either Anthropology or the
Middle East, or consent. (Category III-c: Cross-cultural media; IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 157: War and
Cultural Memory in Literature and Cinema of the Middle East
Cross-listed as ARB
157 and FMS 178
Formation of cultural memory and/or memorialization of
socially traumatic experiences such as war, viewed through literature and
cinema. May include focus on: the Algerian war of independence, the Lebanese
civil war, the Iran-Iraq war, the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, and
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, among others. Primary texts from these
conflicts along with secondary texts on theories of social trauma and cultural
memory. In English. (Category III-a, c: Cross-cultural literature / film)
ILVS 162: The End of
the World, Plan B
A comparative study of end-of-the-world narratives considered from the
perspectives of Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and Science. How and why
our present notions about a final catastrophic moment are actually a
misunderstanding of a paradigm that is common to these various traditions. Why
justice is problematic as a cultural mode and as a societal goal. (Category IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 173: Literary
Theory
Cross-listed as ENG
173
Introduction to literary theory with special emphasis on
questions of language, representation, and ideology. Readings may include
primary texts by Saussure, Levi-Strauss, Lacan, Derrida, de Man, Jameson,
Sedgwick, Butler, Spivak, Gates, Badiou, Agamben, Miller, Gallop, and ¿i¿ek .
Recommendations: ENG 1, 2 REQUIRED or Fulfillment of College Writing
Requirement. Recommended that the student already have taken either ENG
20,21,22, or 23. (Category IV-a: Literary theory)
ILVS 180:
Psychoanalysis and Cultural Criticism
Cross-listed as ENG
180
Advanced seminar in the relation between Lacanian
psychoanalytic theory and contemporary literary and cultural analysis. Focus on
various essays from Lacan's Écrits and several of his seminars, with additional
readings in literary theory selected from the works of authors including Jane
Gallop, Slavoj Zizek, Judith Butler, Alenka Zupancic, Diana Fuss, Leo Bersani,
and Joan Copjec.
Recommendations: ENG 1, 2 REQUIRED or Fulfillment of College Writing
Requirement. Recommended that the student already have taken either ENG
20,21,22, or 23. (Category IV-a, b, c, d: Literary / film/media / visual / cultural theory)
ILVS 185: China and the West
Cross-listed as CHNS 185
How Chinese and Western cultures perceive and represent one another
in film, fiction, TV shows, scholarly writings, and other media.
Cultural, political, and historical reasons and implications
involved. Prerequisite: junior standing. In English. Fulfills
Chinese seminar requirement. (Category IV-d: Cultural theory)
ILVS 186: How Films
Think
Cross-listed as ENG
186 and FMS 186
Advanced seminar exploring the languages of cinematic
representation. Attention to visual logic and the relation between techniques of
cinematic rhetoric (montage, the long take, shot/reverse shot) and the effect of
cinematic ¿thought.¿ Close study of films by directors such as Welles, Scorsese,
Coppola, Tarantino, and Lynch; additional attention to recent work in film
studies and cinema theory. (Category IV-b: Film theory)
ILVS 191/192:
Special Topics
Please see departmental website for detailed course information.
ILVS 193/194:
Directed Study
Directed Study. Please see departmental website for specific details.
ILVS 198/199: Senior
Honors Thesis
Senior Honors Thesis. Please see departmental website for specific details.
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