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Class Schedule Listing

Class Schedule Listing

Class Schedule Listing https://seanet.uncw.edu/TEAL/bwckschd.p_get_crse_unsec

Spring 2021 Class Schedule Listing Oct 27, 2020

Please note that undergraduate university studies courses listed on SeaNet meet requirements for students with the current catalog year only. Undergraduates should check with their academic advisor, review their degree audit, and check their catalog year for specific university studies requirements that they need to fulfill their degree.

Sections Found Concepts in Film - 22250 - FST 110 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FILM STUDIES MAJORS. An introduction to film form and style designed to help students move from passive viewers to active “readers” of cinema. Weekly film screenings and lectures explore the many cinematic concepts and techniques filmmakers use to convey story, mood, and meaning.We’ll study the concept and practice of genre, examine major filmmaking movements, and explore the relationship between form and content. This course is designed for non-majors in film studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Granetta L Richardson (P)

Concepts in Film - 22274 - FST 110 - 801

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FILM STUDIES MAJORS. An introduction to film form and style designed to help students move from passive viewers to active “readers” of cinema. Weekly film screenings and lectures explore the many cinematic concepts and techniques filmmakers use to convey story, mood, and meaning. We’ll study the concept and practice of genre, examine major filmmaking movements,and explore the relationship between form and content. This course is designed for non-majors in film studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

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Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Lucinda Bunting McNamara (P)

Concepts in Film - 22276 - FST 110 - 802

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FILM STUDIES MAJORS. An introduction to film form and style designed to help students move from passive viewers to active “readers” of cinema. Weekly film screenings and lectures explore the many cinematic concepts and techniques filmmakers use to convey story, mood, and meaning. We’ll study the concept and practice of genre, examine major filmmaking movements,and explore the relationship between form and content. This course is designed for non-majors in film studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Lucinda Bunting McNamara (P)

Introduction to Film Study - 22277 - FST 200 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Designed to prepare students to major in Film Studies, this course teaches students how to analyze the aesthetics of cinema. We will study cinema’s stylistic properties, including mise-en-scène, cinematography, editing, and sound. Students will then learn how sounds and moving images work together to structure a film or render a narrative. Along the way, students will develop technical knowledge and writing and analytical skills applicable to film study. The films we will study represent diverse styles, periods, genres, national cinemas, and production modes in order to give students an understanding of the wide range of cinema’s aesthetic possibilities.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

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Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Introduction to Film Study - 22278 - FST 200 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Designed to prepare students to major in Film Studies, this course teaches students how to analyze the aesthetics of cinema. We will study cinema’s stylistic properties, including mise-en-scène, cinematography, editing, and sound. Students will then learn how sounds and moving images work together to structure a film or render a narrative. Along the way, students will develop technical knowledge and writing and analytical skills applicable to film study. The films we will study represent diverse styles, periods, genres, national cinemas, and production modes in order to give students an understanding of the wide range of cinema’s aesthetic possibilities.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Introduction to Film Study - 22279 - FST 200 - 802

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Designed to prepare students to major in Film Studies, this course teaches students how to analyze the aesthetics of cinema. We will study cinema’s stylistic properties, including mise-en-scène, cinematography, editing, and sound. Students will then learn how sounds and moving images work together to structure a film or render a narrative. Along the way, students will develop technical knowledge and writing and analytical skills applicable to film study. The films we will study represent diverse styles, periods, genres, national cinemas, and production modes in order to give students an understanding of the wide range of cinema’s aesthetic possibilities.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Introduction to Film Study - 22280 - FST 200 - 803

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All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Designed to prepare students to major in Film Studies, this course teaches students how to analyze the aesthetics of cinema. We will study cinema’s stylistic properties, including mise-en-scène, cinematography, editing, and sound. Students will then learn how sounds and moving images work together to structure a film or render a narrative. Along the way, students will develop technical knowledge and writing and analytical skills applicable to film study. The films we will study represent diverse styles, periods, genres, national cinemas, and production modes in order to give students an understanding of the wide range of cinema’s aesthetic possibilities.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Introduction to Film Production - 22513 - FST 201 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) Study and application of cinematic concepts and techniques. Students complete a series of collaborative exercises exploring narrative, documentary and experimental film forms.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Explore Beyond Class

Main Campus Lab Schedule Type 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm M Kenan Hall 1122 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm M Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

Introduction to Film Production - 22518 - FST 201 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) Study and application of cinematic concepts and techniques. Students complete a series of collaborative exercises exploring narrative, documentary, and experimental film forms.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Explore Beyond Class

Main Campus

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Lab Schedule Type 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm M Kenan Hall 1122 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm M Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

Introduction to Film Production - 22523 - FST 201 - 003

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F)

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Explore Beyond Class

Main Campus Lab Schedule Type 4.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:30 am - 12:15 pm T Kenan Hall 1122 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

Class 9:30 am - 12:15 pm T Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab David M Monahan (P)

The Business of Film - 22526 - FST 204 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) An overview of the entertainment industry focusing on television and film, pitching, networking, script coverage and the development process.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am F King Hall 104 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Jennifer K Barrow (P)

Introduction to World Cinema - 22281 - FST 205 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history of narrative filmmaking outside the from the beginnings of cinema to the present. Together, we explore the moments and national contexts in which cinema was able to flourish and develop in innovative ways. Some

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of the influential film movements we examine include Soviet montage, German Expressionism, Italian neorealism, the global New Waves, Latin American “third cinema,” and the art cinemas that have emerged in places as disparate as Iran, Senegal, and Hong Kong. We discuss the differences between mainstream, avant-garde, and auteur filmmaking, the importance of film festivals as gatekeepers to the international film circui,; what it means to “decolonize” the world cinema gaze, and why national cinemas remain such a deeply ingrained way of organizing film knowledge and exhibition. As a result, students will gain not only a broader understanding of the evolution of cinema around the world, but also a sense of the key debates at the heart of Film Studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Living in a Global Soc

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Introduction to World Cinema - 22284 - FST 205 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history of narrative filmmaking outside the United States from the beginnings of cinema to the present. Together, we explore the moments and national contexts in which cinema was able to flourish and develop in innovative ways. Some of the influential film movements we examine include Soviet montage, German Expressionism, Italian neorealism, the global New Waves, Latin American “third cinema,” and the art cinemas that have emerged in places as disparate as Iran, Senegal, and Hong Kong. We discuss the differences between mainstream, avant-garde, and auteur filmmaking, the importance of film festivals as gatekeepers to the international film circui,; what it means to “decolonize” the world cinema gaze, and why national cinemas remain such a deeply ingrained way of organizing film knowledge and exhibition. As a result, students will gain not only a broader understanding of the evolution of cinema around the world, but also a sense of the key debates at the heart of Film Studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Living in a Global Soc

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Introduction to World Cinema - 22286 - FST 205 - 802

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history of narrative filmmaking outside the United States from the beginnings of cinema to the present. Together, we explore the moments and national contexts in which cinema was able to flourish and develop in innovative ways. Some of the influential film movements we examine include Soviet montage, German Expressionism, Italian neorealism, the global New

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Waves, Latin American “third cinema,” and the art cinemas that have emerged in places as disparate as Iran, Senegal, and Hong Kong. We discuss the differences between mainstream, avant-garde, and auteur filmmaking, the importance of film festivals as gatekeepers to the international film circui,; what it means to “decolonize” the world cinema gaze, and why national cinemas remain such a deeply ingrained way of organizing film knowledge and exhibition. As a result, students will gain not only a broader understanding of the evolution of cinema around the world, but also a sense of the key debates at the heart of Film Studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Living in a Global Soc

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Introduction to World Cinema - 22289 - FST 205 - 803

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history of narrative filmmaking outside the United States from the beginnings of cinema to the present. Together, we explore the moments and national contexts in which cinema was able to flourish and develop in innovative ways. Some of the influential film movements we examine include Soviet montage, German Expressionism, Italian neorealism, the global New Waves, Latin American “third cinema,” and the art cinemas that have emerged in places as disparate as Iran, Senegal, and Hong Kong. We discuss the differences between mainstream, avant-garde, and auteur filmmaking, the importance of film festivals as gatekeepers to the international film circui,; what it means to “decolonize” the world cinema gaze, and why national cinemas remain such a deeply ingrained way of organizing film knowledge and exhibition. As a result, students will gain not only a broader understanding of the evolution of cinema around the world, but also a sense of the key debates at the heart of Film Studies.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Living in a Global Soc

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Moviemakers and Scholars Series - 22533 - FST 210 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course is designed to teach students a variety of perspectives on filmmaking and film studies. Combining presentations by local and visiting filmmakers with lectures and film screenings conducted by film scholars, the course introduces students to a wide variety of film styles, film scholarship, and professions in the industry.

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Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 1:00 pm - 3:45 pm F Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Terry Jon Linehan (P)

3-D Computer Graphics Tools and Literacy - 23209 - FST 220 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at an assigned day/time – determined by instructor within assigned class schedule. Some course content will be delivered online asynchronously. (AFAO) This class provides an introduction to the artistic and technical field of computer graphics and animation, focusing on basic 3-D modeling, shading, lighting and rendering. Major concepts are covered and applied in several projects using advanced software, building to a final course project where comprehensive knowledge gained is applied in an interdisciplinary nature.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 1:45 pm MW Friday Annex 152 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Jeremiah David Roberts (P)

3-D Computer Graphics Tools and Literacy - 23210 - FST 220 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at an assigned day/time – determined by instructor within assigned class schedule. Some course content will be delivered online asynchronously. (AFAO) This class provides an introduction to the artistic and technical field of computer graphics and animation, focusing on basic 3-D modeling, shading, lighting and rendering. Major concepts are covered and applied in several projects using advanced software, building to a final course project where comprehensive knowledge gained is applied in an interdisciplinary nature.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 5:00 pm - 6:15 pm MW Friday Annex 152 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Jeremiah David Roberts (P)

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Women in Film - 23352 - FST 230 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. (OLASY) Survey and analysis of films by women filmmakers throughout the world. Diverse film styles, periods, and genres will be represented. Screening and discussion of cinematic works in their original language with English subtitles when needed.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Aesth, Int, & Lit Pers

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Cami-Vela (P)

Film Tools and Techniques - 22599 - FST 301 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at an assigned day/time – determined by instructor within assigned class schedule. Some course content will be delivered online asynchronously. (AFAO) Instruction in the techniques and technologies of digital filmmaking, including camera, lenses, lighting, grip, and set protocol.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Lab Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am W Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab Glenn A Pack (P)

Film Tools and Techniques - 22602 - FST 301 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at an assigned day/time – determined by instructor within assigned class schedule. Some course content will be delivered online asynchronously. (AFAO) Instruction in the techniques and technologies of digital filmmaking, including camera, lenses, lighting, grip, and set protocol.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Lab Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

9 of 24 10/27/20, 10:04 AM Class Schedule Listing https://seanet.uncw.edu/TEAL/bwckschd.p_get_crse_unsec

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm W Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab Glenn A Pack (P)

Intermediate Film Production: Documentary - 22604 - FST 302 - 001

All students are to complete course content online synchronously according to the days/times assigned to the course. Some face-to- face activities will be required with varying frequency and will be shared via the syllabus. (SOF) This course will explore issues and concepts that characterize documentary production as students study and discuss different modes of documentary filmmaking (Poetic, Expository, Observational, Participatory, Performative and Reflexive). In addition to developing a stronger aesthetic and conceptual understanding of documentary filmmaking, each assignment will allow students to gain experience with artisanal, archival (found footage), observational, participatory, and autobiographical modes of documentary.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Cluster-Creative Thought & Exp, Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:30 am - 12:15 pm R King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Georg A Koszulinski (P)

Intermediate Film Production: Narrative - 22616 - FST 302 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at an assigned day/time – determined by instructor within assigned class schedule. Some course content will be delivered online asynchronously. (AFAO) Intermediate Film Production: Narrative This class is a comprehensive practicum in motion picture pre-production, production, and post-production. Students will be introduced to basic camera, lighting, grip and sound techniques while emphasizing non-equipment duties (producing, directing, casting, locations and assistant directing).

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Cluster-Creative Thought & Exp, Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am M Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Glenn A Pack (P)

Intermediate Film Production: Experimental - 22575 - FST 302 - 800

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All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) With a focus on the concept of "Digital Realms," students are prompted to explore new means of expression - styles and techniques that have yet to be discovered that take into consideration our residency in both the digital and physical worlds. Students will be required to do readings, lead in class presentations, and produce several film, video, audio or multimedia productions that focus on the issues discussed in class.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Cluster-Creative Thought & Exp, Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Andre Bruno Silva (P)

Screenwriting I: Introduction to Screenwriting - 22562 - FST 318 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) An introduction to screenwriting format, technique, and structure. Students write multiple drafts of a short screenplay and complete exercises that engage storytelling craft and aid in the development of their script.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Seminar Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar David M Monahan (P)

Screenwriting I: Introduction to Screenwriting - 22566 - FST 318 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN)

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Seminar Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

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Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Terry Jon Linehan (P)

Computer Animation - 23211 - FST 320 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. (OLASY) This course continues material introduced in FST 220 and concentrates on character animation including its related theory, production and industry. Advanced 3D modeling, shading, rendering, character-design and rigging skills are developed in conjunction with traditional principles of story, animation, lighting and cinematography. Students complete several projects and the production cycle for a final animated short-film project.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Gene A Felice (P)

Producing: Narrative - 22569 - FST 330 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Focuses on duties of a producer through a project “life cycle”: development, financing, pre-production, production, post-production, marketing and distribution. Emphasizes production management, budgeting and scheduling.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lab Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab Terry Jon Linehan (P)

Introduction to Editing - 22621 - FST 331 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. Some synchronous online activities will be required with varying frequency and will be shared via the syllabus. (AOSO) An introduction to the techniques and aesthetics of non-linear editing for motion pictures. Students will learn through the instruction and use of Premiere Pro digital editing software to explore editing in a variety of genres: narrative, documentary and found footage experimental.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021

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Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:30 am - 12:15 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Mariah Lynn Kramer (P)

Introduction to Editing - 23212 - FST 331 - 801

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. Some synchronous online activities will be required with varying frequency and will be shared via the syllabus. (AOSO) An introduction to the techniques and aesthetics of non-linear editing for motion pictures. Students will learn through the instruction and use of Premiere Pro digital editing software to explore editing in a variety of genres: narrative, documentary and found footage experimental.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Mariah Lynn Kramer (P)

Modes of Animation Production: Micro-animation and the Gif - 22571 - FST 333 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) More dynamic than a still image but shorter than a video, gifs combine a series of animated images into a single web-friendly file. Students receive instruction in Photoshop, After Effects and Illustrator to create gif animations in a variety of styles, while examining the role of gif animations within a cultural context. Additionally, students explore the practice of creating larger multi-gif themed projects.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

13 of 24 10/27/20, 10:04 AM Class Schedule Listing https://seanet.uncw.edu/TEAL/bwckschd.p_get_crse_unsec

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Andre Bruno Silva (P)

Producing the Undergraduate Film Magazine - 22537 - FST 363 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously. (OLASY) This class will introduce students to the publication process of an undergraduate film magazine. Depending upon the needs of the magazine, students will create magazine policy and protocol, based upon research of different publication models; set and disseminate calls for themed issues; solicit and review content from peers throughout the world; liaise with contributors and publishers; write original content; prepare content for publication; design layouts, incorporating images to enhance texts; and promote and market the resulting product. Students will gain real-world experience, partnering with Intellect – a scholarly press based in Bristol (UK) and Wilmington – and producing actual magazine issues that will be distributed globally.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Extension Campus Seminar Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Liza J Palmer (P)

History of - 22292 - FST 371 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history, theory, and practice of documentary film. We examine analyze the key features of the major documentary modes, starting with expository, ethnographic and poetic documentaries, moving through the debates raging around direct cinema and cinéma vérité in the 1960s and continuing through more interactive modes that mix observation, interviews, and archival materials all the way up until the digital and interactive documentaries of the present day. Drawing on examples from around the world, we study how these films produce their authority, as well as the way in which the filmmakers position themselves in relation to the events on screen. We ask: how do these films construct their arguments? How do they shape our notions of ‘fact,’ ‘reality’ and ‘point of view’? What are the ethics and politics of representation and who gets to speak for whom? Throughout, we remain attentive both to what documentaries help render more visible and what they might conceal.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:45 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 12:30 pm - 1:45 pm W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

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History of Documentary Film - 22293 - FST 371 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course surveys the history, theory, and practice of documentary film. We examine analyze the key features of the major documentary modes, starting with expository, ethnographic and poetic documentaries, moving through the debates raging around direct cinema and cinéma vérité in the 1960s and continuing through more interactive modes that mix observation, interviews, and archival materials all the way up until the digital and interactive documentaries of the present day. Drawing on examples from around the world, we study how these films produce their authority, as well as the way in which the filmmakers position themselves in relation to the events on screen. We ask: how do these films construct their arguments? How do they shape our notions of ‘fact,’ ‘reality’ and ‘point of view’? What are the ethics and politics of representation and who gets to speak for whom? Throughout, we remain attentive both to what documentaries help render more visible and what they might conceal.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:45 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Class 2:00 pm - 3:15 pm W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Shpolberg (P)

Advanced Studies in Global Film History: Classical French Cinema - 22313 - FST 375 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. The remaining content will be delivered online synchronously. (PFSO) This class explores the historical complex of classical French cinema: the final flourishes of pre-sound filmmaking, the coming of sound, the Golden Era of the 1930s, the Occupation and after, the commercial boom of the 1950s, right up to the rupture of the French New Wave. Varied critical models will situate key tendencies in French classicism: the legacy of Impressionism in practice and theory; the role of popular genres like poetic realism and the crime thriller policier; the dialogue between French and American studio systems; the star phenomenon and figures like Jean Gabin; the influence of the State on French cinema; and non-traditional forms like essay films and child-centric cinema. In these contexts we will consider many different modes of film practice (creating features, shorts, animations, fictions, documentaries, hybrid formats), as well as brilliant iconoclast filmmakers, from Jean Epstein to Jean Renoir, from Jacqueline Audry to Agnès Varda.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Less than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:45 pm T King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Timothy N Palmer (P)

Class 12:30 pm - 1:45 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Timothy N Palmer (P)

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American Cinema 1927-1960 - 22252 - FST 376 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) This course introduces students to the history and aesthetics of American cinema from the beginning of talkies until the break-up of the studio system, arguably the most influential, fertile, and entertaining period in world cinema. We will seek to understand the historical conditions that enabled American cinema to assume the form it had during the studio era. We will examine, for instance, the Hollywood studio system, its narrative and stylistic practices, the role of film producers and directors, the star system, and the place genre holds in Hollywood filmmaking. We will study the careers of important American filmmakers, such as Frank Capra, John Ford, Howard Hawks, and Alfred Hitchcock. We will examine the impact of events in the history of studio-era filmmaking, such as the advent of sound technologies, color and widescreen film processes, the Hays Production Code, the blacklist, and whatever else comes up. Throughout, we will study movies as movies—as experiences for spectators—and we will never stray far from our central question and the only question about cinema that I care much about: What is it about the movies people enjoy that makes people enjoy them?

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

American Cinema 1927-1960 - 22254 - FST 376 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) This course introduces students to the history and aesthetics of American cinema from the beginning of talkies until the break-up of the studio system, arguably the most influential, fertile, and entertaining period in world cinema. We will seek to understand the historical conditions that enabled American cinema to assume the form it had during the studio era. We will examine, for instance, the Hollywood studio system, its narrative and stylistic practices, the role of film producers and directors, the star system, and the place genre holds in Hollywood filmmaking. We will study the careers of important American filmmakers, such as Frank Capra, John Ford, Howard Hawks, and Alfred Hitchcock. We will examine the impact of events in the history of studio-era filmmaking, such as the advent of sound technologies, color and widescreen film processes, the Hays Production Code, the blacklist, and whatever else comes up. Throughout, we will study movies as movies—as experiences for spectators—and we will never stray far from our central question and the only question about cinema that I care much about: What is it about the movies people enjoy that makes people enjoy them?

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

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Studies in Film History Studies in Film History: LGBT+ - 22296 - FST 379 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Historical overview of a major period in film. Approaches to film historiography.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Extension Campus Seminar Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Studies in Film History: LGBT+ - 22297 - FST 379 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Historical overview of a major period in film. Approaches to film historiography.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Information Literacy

Extension Campus Seminar Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Seminar Elizabeth J Rawitsch (P)

Introduction to Bollywood Cinema - 22300 - FST 380 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN)

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

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Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Class 9:00 am - 10:15 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Introduction to Bollywood Cinema - 22301 - FST 380 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN)

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 12:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Class 10:30 am - 11:45 am W Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Introduction to Spanish Cinema - 23578 - FST 388 - 800

All students are to complete course content online asynchronously.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - asynchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class TBA Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Maria Cami-Vela (P)

Practicum in Film Production: Production Design for Film - 22271 - FST 398 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. The remaining content will be delivered online synchronously. (PFSO) To study the artistry and craft of Film Production Design. Examine and discuss the work of prominent film Art Directors and Production Designers such as William Cameron Menzies, Lawrence G. Paull and Ken Adams, including their sketches, renderings and models. Some films will be viewed in entirety, others only for important craft segments and the background work of the designers will be showcased. An in-depth presentation of film scenic backdrops, soundstage sets, backlots and models. Practical projects include storyboarding a scene, designing and building a to-scale miniature backlot set, matte painting, design rendering and a Saturday

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location scouting expedition.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Practicum Schedule Type Less than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm R Cultural Arts Building 2021 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Practicum Randall A Enlow (P)

Practicum in Film Production: Writing the TV Pilot - 22540 - FST 398 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) An overview of the ever-changing TV industry with an extensive look at current TV trends and the pilot development process. Students will study different TV genres, compare and contrast TV shows, and write the first draft of an original TV Series (a pilot).

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Main Campus Practicum Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:00 pm - 2:45 pm F King Hall 104 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Practicum Jennifer K Barrow (P)

Film Directing - 22542 - FST 399 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) This course explores film directing with an emphasis on the director’s process. Topics include pre-production and working with actors, script, and camera.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins

Extension Campus Lab Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lab Frederick M Hackler (P)

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Screenwriting II: Writing the Feature Film - 22545 - FST 418 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Students plan a feature-length screenplay, and write, workshop, and complete the first act.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Frederick M Hackler (P)

Film Festival and Conference Management - 22548 - FST 451 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Students research, plan, market, and manage the Visions Film Festival and Conference. By application only.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:45 am M Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Shannon Lee Silva (P)

Trial Course: Film Festival and Conference Programming - 22663 - FST 492 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Students study various models of jurying and curating connected to filmmaking and scholarship while programming the Visions Film Festival and Conference. By application only.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

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Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Shannon Lee Silva (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Production: Documentary/Experimental/Animation - 22628 - FST 495 - 001

All students are to complete course content online synchronously according to the days/times assigned to the course. Some face-to- face activities will be required with varying frequency and will be shared via the syllabus. (SOF) In this capstone course, students synthesize the skills gained from previous courses to produce one of the following: (1) a short documentary film, (2) a short experimental film, or (3) a short animated film.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Capstone

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 3:30 pm - 6:15 pm R King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Georg A Koszulinski (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Production: Narrative - 22650 - FST 495 - 002

All students are to complete course content online synchronously according to the days/times assigned to the course. Some face-to- face activities will be required with varying frequency and will be shared via the syllabus. (SOF) An intensive capstone course in which Film Studies students work in collaborative teams to complete the preproduction and production of short, narrative motion pictures. All students interested in having a script considered for production should come to the first class with a polished script of twelve pages or less. Students will apply for crew positions to be assigned by instructor after class consultation. Only serious students motivated to collaborate on a festival quality project should register for this course.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Capstone

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Greater than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm T Kenan Hall 1114 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Glenn A Pack (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Production: Narrative - 22553 - FST 495 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) An intensive capstone course in which students typically collaborate to create a short, narrative motion picture. Due to Covid-19, students will be given additional options to the traditional filmmaking model. All students interested in having a script considered for

21 of 24 10/27/20, 10:04 AM Class Schedule Listing https://seanet.uncw.edu/TEAL/bwckschd.p_get_crse_unsec

production must come to the first class with a polished script of 8-10 pages (students are advised to email the instructor at [email protected] for script requirements).

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: Stud Blanket Prof Liab Ins, UnvStdy Capstone

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 3:15 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Frederick M Hackler (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Study: Approaches to Film Aesthetics - 22262 - FST 496 - 001

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) What makes a movie interesting, pleasurable, engaging, emotionally affecting, thought-provoking, or beautiful? How does a film’s artistic design affect our cinematic experience? Film researchers working in aesthetics seek to answer these questions, and some have extended the investigation in exciting directions. This course showcases innovative approaches to film aesthetics, illustrating the potential of this work to illuminate key aspects of the cinema, including film history, film technology, and the film industry. We will study a range of scholars (from film studies, psychology, and philosophy) working in film aesthetics and watch movies that offer a variety of aesthetic experiences. Wherever we are in the course, we will not be far from our central question and the only question about the cinema that I think much about: What is it about the movies people enjoy that makes people enjoy them? This course partially satisfies the Writing Competency requirement in the Film Studies major, and we will also spend class time working on improving your writing skills.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Capstone, UnvStdy Critical Reasoning, UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 1:00 pm - 3:15 pm M King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

Class 1:00 pm - 3:15 pm W King Hall 104 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Todd Mathew Berliner (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Study: 1960s French Cinema - 22264 - FST 496 - 002

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. The remaining content will be delivered online synchronously. (PFSO) This senior seminar studies 1960s French cinema, one of the most influential, diverse, and dynamic decades of filmmaking ever. We start with an explosion: the French New Wave (nouvelle vague), a seminal and brilliant movement that launched a new generation of critics-turned-directors (led by Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut), drastically overhauled the French film industry, created new modes of production and new means of cinematic representation, and inspired other new waves around the world, Europe to Asia to . Spiraling out from this New Wave core, we go on to consider a suite of knock-on discoveries and counter-revolutions in (French) cinematic expression, highlighting throughout both non-traditional formats (shorts, mediums, essay films, animations, radical cinemas) and especially the contributions of women filmmakers, from the well-known (Agnès Varda) to the marginalized (Paule Delsol, Nelly Kaplan, Jackie Raynal).

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Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Capstone, UnvStdy Critical Reasoning, UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type Less than 50% Web/Class Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:00 am - 11:15 am T King Hall 104 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Timothy N Palmer (P)

Class 9:00 am - 11:15 am R King Hall 104 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Timothy N Palmer (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Study: Portrait of Jason in its Contexts - 22268 - FST 496 - 003

All students are expected to attend and participate in person at the assigned day/time. (F2F) This class will take one film, the landmark experimental documentary PORTRAIT OF JASON (1967), as its point of departure. Over the course of one semester, we will explore all of this deeply provocative film's determining influences, including its artistic, social, political, and cultural contexts. In the process we will study and discuss documentary practice and ethics, race and gender politics, avant-garde experimentalism, the historical origins of independent feature filmmaking, theatrical adaptation, jazz music, sexual identity, autobiography, performance art, and psychedelia. Additional screenings will include work by John Cassavetes, Jonas Mekas, Agnes Varda, D A Pennebaker, Andy Warhol, Melvin Van Peebles, Chris Marker, and Brian De Palma.

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Capstone, UnvStdy Critical Reasoning, UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Main Campus Lecture Schedule Type 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 4:30 pm W King Hall 101 Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Juan Carlos Kase (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Studies: Contemporary Cinefeminisms -- World Cinema and the Woman Cineaste - 22305 - FST 496 - 800

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN) Where in the world are women making movies and for whom? What is the critical force of contemporary women’s cinema? What do these films and makers mean for the future of feminism and of cinema? What are the global cartographies of contemporary cine- feminism? This seminar attempts to answer these questions through the study of women cineastes, who make films about women, in a range of worldwide contexts. Drawing on fiction films, from the first two decades of the twenty-first century, the course addresses different sites of women’s film practice including filmmakers from Argentina, Australia, France, India, Iran, Lebanon, New Zealand, Pakistan, Peru, Saudi Arabia and the United States. Through readings and discussions, we will learn to contextualize the varied media production contexts that range from emergent film industries to transnational coproduction arrangements. Recognizing how these films remain responsive to both national audiences and transnational concerns, we will also attempt to map the multiple flows of cross-cultural consumption by addressing the international film festival circuit, DVD labels, film blogs and Internet streaming sites. The readings located at the intersection of transnational feminist and transnational media studies, will draw on the interdisciplinary scholarship in postcolonial, cultural, race and ethnic, and diaspora studies. The assignments will encourage the students to grasp the imaginative possibilities of this critical body of work.

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Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Capstone, UnvStdy Critical Reasoning, UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 9:30 am - 11:45 am T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Class 9:30 am - 11:45 am R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Priyadarshini Shanker (P)

Senior Seminar in Film Study: The Rhetoric of Disney - 22303 - FST 496 - 801

All students are to complete course content online synchronously. (OLSYN)

Associated Term: Spring 2021 Registration Dates: Nov 09, 2020 to Jan 27, 2021 Levels: Undergraduate Attributes: UnvStdy Capstone, UnvStdy Critical Reasoning, UnvStdy Writing Intensive

Extension Campus Lecture Schedule Type Fully Online - synchronous Instructional Method 3.000 Credits View Catalog Entry

Scheduled Meeting Times Type Time Days Where Date Range Schedule Type Instructors

Class 12:30 pm - 2:45 pm T Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Granetta L Richardson (P)

Class 12:30 pm - 2:45 pm R Online-Extension (<> county) Jan 20, 2021 - May 06, 2021 Lecture Granetta L Richardson (P)

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