ENVH 310
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Global Eco-Cinema: Aesthetics and Practice
Department(s)
Course Description
What role do films play in shaping our imagination of the environment? How has cinema influenced our actions in the past, and how might it alter our actions in the future? What effect do films have in understanding non-human systems, knowledge production, or storytelling? How can an eco-critical approach to film challenge and/or subvert those assertions? Can film in particular advocate for the planet's agency? These are some of the central questions we will explore as we screen and examine the intersections between films/film-making and ecological ways of knowing from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas. Through critical analysis of a variety of cinema traditions, genres, and practices, students gain exposure to films as expressions of environmental discourse and their potential as inspiration and instigators of environmental action. Students apply the tools of eco-critical cultural studies and ecologically informed approaches to cinematic practice, and to representations of the relationships that humans have with the non-human. Themes explored will vary and may include: the material ecologies of film production; cinematic ideology and affect; the eco-politics of Hollywood and its alternatives; representations of landscape, sense of place, and identity; the imperial and colonial gaze; ecological utopias and dystopias; tensions between human `dominance' and co-existence with other species; problematizing the eco-documentary; the ever-growing climate catastrophe genre and its reactions (e.g. eco-anxiety); foodways and human (over)consumption; and Indigenous and social justice activism.
Course Typically Offered
Offered occasionally.
Career
Undergraduate
Catalog Course Attributes
CO24 - ARTHUM (Artistic and Humanistic), INTD - HUM-EMPIRE (Intd Humanities-Empire IHE), INTD - HUM-VSCLTR (Intd Humanities-Visual IHE)
Min Units
1
Max Units
1
Name
Lecture
Optional Component
No
Final Exam Type
Yes