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> Film Studies Certificate
Film Studies Certificate
Contact: Catherine Portuges,
Director
Office: 101 South College
Phone: 545-3659
The Faculty
The Committee of the Interdepartmental
Program in Film Studies administers the program and advises students in
the Certificate in Film Studies. Committee members are: Chair: Catherine
Portuges (Comparative Literature), Carolyn Anderson (Communication), Liane
Brandon (School of Education), Dianne Brooks (Legal Studies), Barton Byg
(Germanic Languages), Anne Ciecko (Communication), Laszlo Dienes (Comparative
Literature), Patricia Galvis-Assmus (Art), Crystal Griffith (Visiting
Five College Film/Video), Susan Jahoda (Art), Don Levine (Comparative Literature), Martin Norden (Communication), Richard Stromgren (Communication), Jacqueline
Urla (Anthropology). Associated faculty (2000-01): Juan Caban (School
of Education), Edwin Gentzler
(Comparative Literature), Angel Loureiro
(Spanish and Portuguese), Patrick Mensah (French and Italian),
Roger Rideout (Music), Robert Schwartzwald (French
and Italian), John Stacey (Director, Audio-Visual Department),
Jennifer Stone (French and Italian).
The Certificate in Film Studies
The Interdepartmental Program
in Film Studies offers a certificate (equivalent to a minor) to undergraduate
students as a complement to their academic major. All undergraduates formally
enrolled at the University may apply to this program which, upon successful
completion, leads to a formal certificate in film studies at the time
of graduation. The program provides a coherent course of study in film
and video as contemporary art forms, drawing upon professors from ten
departments in the Colleges of Humanities and Fine Arts and Social and
Behavioral Sciences. Interested students are encouraged to meet with one
of the participating faculty advisers to design an individual course sequence.
The Certificate in Film Studies in addition
to a chosen major offers an excellent background for students who intend
to enter the professional fields of film and television, wish to apply
to graduate film school, and/or would like to expand their liberal arts
education. The program offers practical experience through internships
with public television and independent production companies, and other
external opportunities for advanced work in theory, history, criticism
and related aspects of studies in the moving image.
Requirements
A student who wishes to
obtain a certificate in film studies takes a minimum of six courses (eighteen
credits) in film, video and/or television from at least three different
departments in order to ensure the interdepartmental and interdisciplinary
nature of the certificate. These eighteen credits are drawn from five
categories of courses, including:
1. An introductory course
in film
2. Theory or history of
film
3. Genre, auteur or national
cinema
4. Upper-level seminars
5. Electives (courses in
film or video production strongly encouraged)
The University offers approximately twenty
courses in film and related arts across the disciplines each semester,
providing students with a wide selection of seminars that address film
theory, criticism, and production, as well as connections between film
and other visual and performing arts.
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