Admission requirements
N.A.
Description
In this course we study how moving images can contribute to political activism and emancipation. The Latin American Third Cinema movement from the 1960s and 70s is a starting point for analyzing third cinema aesthetics and ideology, the participant's role in third cinema practices and theoretical considerations of these explicit non-Western film approach. Does the ideology and aesthetics of third cinema actually defy the conventional categories and views of traditional (Eurocentric) film studies, as Teshome Gabriel claims? Are the militant attitude and national perspective of the early third cinema movement still relevant in our contemporary era, which many believe is characterized by migration, hybridization, multiculturalism and globalization? In the sessions of this lecture we investigate the influences and ramifications of third cinema in contemporary cinema and in theoretical texts by, for example, Hamid Naficy, Olga Bailey, Corinn Columpar and Robert Stam. Argentine Third Cinema filmmakers Fernando Solanas and Octavio Getino claimed in their manifesto that they made their films “with the camera in one hand and a rock in the other” (1971). Ever since, political film practices often have a less aggressive tendency, or replace the film camera with a digital video camera or a website. In this course we study these non-militant and other (new media) successors of third cinema.
Course objectives
On completion of this course:
the student has knowledge of the main characteristics of Third Cinema practices and theories that arose in Latin America in the 1960s;
the student has knowledge of the more contemporary successors of Third Cinema and of Third Cinema applications in a broader sense (such as Third World Cinema, Fourth Cinema and Accented Cinema);
the student has insight into the extensions and developments of Third Cinema in various image technologies and activist new media practices;
the student has knowledge of and insight into the main theories about this;
the student is able to recognize, compare and interpret the main forms of Third Cinema in a narrow sense and its successors in a broad sense since the 1960s;
the student is able to construct an argument in the form of a paper in which a political film, video or new media object is analyzed and positioned within debates about Third Cinema;
the student has knowledge of the most important developments in the field of multi-media practices within an artistic and everyday context (expanded cinema in the broad sense) since the sixties of the last century;
the student has knowledge of the interweaving of various media practices and visual technologies within contemporary visual culture (media ecology);
the student has knowledge of and insight into the main theories about this;
the student is able to recognize, describe and interpret the main forms of multi-media practice (expanded cinema in the broad sense) since the 1960s;
the student is able to construct an argument in the form of a paper in which a multi-media practice and / or the relationship between different media practices is interpreted
Timetable
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Mode of instruction
Seminar
Assessment method
Assessment
Final paper
Class assignments
Weighing
Final paper 100%
Class assignments: Fail/pass
Resit
All components can be retaken. The resit will involve the same subtest as the first opportunity.
Inspection and feedback
A feedback form will be provided. Digital submissions will be required via Turnitin and comments/corrections will be accessible to view for the student. Feedback and final mark will be available two weeks after the final submission date.
Reading list
Literature will be announced on Brightspace before the beginning of the course. Texts will be made available on Brightspace. Literature should be studied before each class.
Registration
Enrolment through uSis is mandatory.
General information about uSis is available on the website.
Registration Studeren à la carte en Contractonderwijs
Not applicable.
Contact
Tutor: Dr. J.A. Ross
Student administration: Arsenaal
Coordinator of studies: ms. M.E. Dijkgraaf MA
Remarks
N.A.