Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Camden Undergraduate
 
About the University
Undergraduate Education in Camden
Degree Requirements
Liberal Arts Colleges
Camden College of Arts and Sciences
University College-Camden
Programs, Faculty, and Courses
Course Notation Information
Availability of Majors
Accounting 010
Africana Studies 014
American History 512
American Literature 352
Anthropology 070
Art (Art 080, Art History 082)
Arts and Sciences 090 (Interdisciplinary Courses)
Astronomy 100
Biochemistry 115
Biology 120
Biology, Computational and Integrative 121
Biomedical Technology 124
Business Administration 135
Business Law 140
Chemistry (Biochemistry 115, Chemistry 160)
Childhood Studies 163
Computer Science 198
Criminal Justice 202
Dance 203
Digital Studies 209
Ecommerce and Information Technology 623
Economics 220
Institute for Effective Education 964
Engineering Transfer 005
English (English Literature 350, American Literature 352, Film 354, Journalism 570, Linguistics 615, Writing 989)
European Studies 310
Finance 390
Fine Arts (Art 080, Art History 082; Museum Studies 698; Music 700, 701; Speech 950; Theater Arts 965)
International Studies
Art 080 and Art History 082
Major Requirements
Minor Requirements
Studio Art and Digital Arts Areas 080
Studio and Digital Arts Areas of Specialization
Art History 082 Area of Specialization (39 credits)
Student-Proposed Majors
Departmental Honors Program in Art and Art History
Art Major with Teacher Certification
Courses (Art 080)
Courses (Art History 082)
Museum Studies 698
Courses (Museum Studies 698)
Music 700, Applied Music 701
Music Major Requirements (minimum 45 credits)
Music Minor Requirements (minimum 20 credits)
Music Major with Teacher Certification (minimum 44 credits)
Departmental Honors Program in Music
Courses (Music 700)
Courses (Applied Music 701)
Theater Arts (Dance 203, Speech 950, Theater Arts 965)
Theater Arts Major Requirements (45 credits)
Theater Arts Minor Requirements (minimum 18 credits)
Musical Theater Program
Teacher Certification in Theater Arts
Courses (Theater Arts 965)
Courses (Dance 203)
Courses (Speech 950)
French 420
Geology 460
German 470
Health Sciences 499
History (Historical Methods and Research 509; European History 510; American History 512; African, Asian, Latin American, and Comparative History 516)
Honors College 525
Human Resource Management 533
International Studies 549
Journalism 570
Latin American and Latino Studies (LALS) Minor
Law
Liberal Studies 606
Linguistics 615
Management 620
Marketing 630
Mathematical Sciences (Mathematics 640, Statistics 960)
Medicine, Dentistry, and Veterinary Medicine
Museum Studies 698
Music 700, 701
Pharmacy 720
Philosophy and Religion 730, 840
Physics 750
Political Science 790
Psychology 830
Religion 840
Reserve Officer Training Programs
Social Work 910
Sociology (Anthropology 070, Criminal Justice 202, Sociology 920)
Spanish 940
Speech 950
Statistics 960
Student-Proposed Majors and Minors 555
Theater Arts (Dance 203, Speech 950, Theater Arts 965)
Urban Studies 975
Women's and Gender Studies 988
World Languages and Cultures (French 420, German 470, Italian 560, Spanish 940)
School of Business-Camden
School of Nursing-Camden
Academic Policies and Procedures
Divisions of the University
Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  Camden Undergraduate Catalog 2016-2018 Liberal Arts Colleges Programs, Faculty, and Courses Fine Arts (Art 080, Art History 082; Museum Studies 698; Music 700, 701; Speech 950; Theater Arts 965) Courses (Theater Arts 965)  

Courses (Theater Arts 965)

50:965:101 Introduction To Theater (G) (3)
An introduction to the collaborative process of creating theater by examining the roles of the producer, playwright, director, actor, and designer, and how aesthetic choices are made based on analysis and interpretation of play texts.

50:965:102 History of Film I (3) Survey of world cinema from 1890 to 1939. With an emphasis on the invention of cinema as a global effort, the course covers pre-cinema and early motion picture technology, the development of film as art, and the growth of the Hollywood system and international cinema.
50:965:103 History of Film II (3) Survey of world cinema from 1940 to present. Focus is on the major artistic developments and movements in cinema around the globe. Includes discussion of major films auteurs, genres, and contemporary films.
50:965:123 Voice for the Stage (3)

Training and development of the actor's voice to develop optimal pitch, vocal range, improved articulation, and the ability to use the voice as an instrument.

50:965:124 Movement For The Stage (3)

Training and development of the actor's body to develop optimal range of movement and creative potential for the actor.

50:965:125 Introduction to Video and Film (3) Exploration and survey of a variety of methods of video production and filmmaking using digital equipment and nonlinear editing to produce a range of films.
50:965:202 Play Reading and Analysis (3)
The fundamentals of script analysis as it relates to the work of the director, the actor, and the designer.

50:965:225 Video and Film Production (3) Continued exploration of a variety of methods of video and filmmaking using digital equipment and nonlinear editing software, focusing on lighting and sound techniques to produce larger team productions. Prerequisite: 50:965:125 or permission of instructor.
50:965:241 Stagecraft (3) An introduction to the behind-the-scenes elements of a theater production developed through theory and stage crew experiences. Subjects covered may include scenery construction and painting, drafting, sound, digital electronics, stage management, and production organization.
50:965:242 Stagecraft II (3) A continuation of Stagecraft I (50:965:241), this course focuses on more advanced scenic construction, electrical work in theatrical lighting, prop construction, and the development of related crafts in the theater.
50:965:270 Stage Makeup (3) Introduction to stage makeup design and techniques for the actor.
50:965:271 Acting I (3) A foundational course that introduces the basic concepts of characterization through improvisational exercises, text analysis, and scene study. This course may be taken as part of a minor in media studies.
50:965:301 Performance (BA) This course provides practical experience for the actor through mainstage or workshop productions. Prerequisite: By audition or permission of instructor. May be repeated for credit.
50:965:302 Practicum/Crew Call in Technical Theater (BA) An extension of technical theater studies with an emphasis on our mainstage and small-stage productions. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisites: 50:965:241 or other departmental courses relevant to the practicum or permission of instructor.
50:965:303 Actor Director Workshop (BA) A hands-on course in which student directors work with student actors to produce plays. May be repeated for credit.
50:965:308 American Musical Theater (3) This course examines the development of one of the most quintessentially American performance forms--the musical--from its various origins in European operetta, vaudeville, minstrelsy, and melodrama, to its most contemporary incarnations in the current Broadway season.
50:965:309 American Theater (3) The development of the American theater as an artistic, literary, cultural, historical, political, and social phenomenon, including the study of plays, playwrights, actors, directors, designers, and theater companies in the United States from the colonial era to the present day.
50:965:310 Experimental Theater (3) A look at the American and European avant-garde in the 20th century, exploring how traditional patterns were and still are broken on all levels: artistic, political, and philosophical.
50:965:314 Scenic Design (3) Fundamentals of scenic design, including history, theory of design, drafting, rendering, modeling, and practical application.
Prerequisite: 50:965:241 or permission of instructor.
50:965:318 Playwriting I (3) Provides experience with fundamental skills and techniques essential to new play development and writing that is particular to the stage. Examines traditional conventions of the "well-made play" while also experimenting with writing for a theater that breaks with those conventions.
50:965:319  Playwriting II (3) Covers practical approaches to reshaping works-in-progress for staged readings and workshop productions. The workshop atmosphere will help students to develop a professional perspective on playwriting, rehearsal process, and production values. Prerequisite: 50:965:318 or permission of instructor.
50:965:320 Directing I (3) The fundamentals of stage directing, including composition, picturization, movement, stage business, tempo, script selection, analysis, casting, and rehearsal planning.
Prerequisite: 50:965:202 or permission of instructor.
50:965:321 Directing II (3) Advanced study of the principles and techniques of directing plays of various types and styles.
Prerequisite: 50:965:320. May be repeated for credit.
50:965:322 Directing for Film (3) A foundation course that introduces the basic concepts of directing for film and video. Students will learn by making short films. Emphasis is placed on a director's ability to implement basic uses of actors and practical aspects of technical production.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
50:965:325 Advanced Video and Film Production (3) Students will explore concepts and techniques of screenwriting, digital editing, and film compositing and effects. Each student will develop an individual project from preproduction to postproduction. Prerequisite: 50:965:225 or permission of instructor.
50:965:345 Theater and Film in Europe (3)

A study of 20th-century movements in European film, which ran parallel to the expanding world of wildly new theater. Examines content and performance style that are specific to European countries, cultures, and individuals. An emphasis on influences and sensibilities well apart from our general awareness of theater and cinema in the United States.

50:965:361 Survey of Costume History (3) This survey course traces the evolution of dress from the ancient period to the present.
50:965:362 Costume Design (3) Fundamentals of costume design, including history of costume and fashion, theory of design, research methods, rendering, and practical application. Techniques in drawing the basic human form.
50:965:363 Educational/Children's Theater (3) This course examines techniques for theater in the classroom, creative dramatics, and theater for young audiences.
50:965:371 Acting II (3) Development of material introduced in Acting I, with more advanced emphasis on realistic scene study and various approaches to an actor's preparation. Prerequisite: 50:965:271 or permission of instructor.
50:965:372 Acting for Film (3) A foundation course that introduces the basic concepts of acting for film and video.  Emphasis is placed on an actor's ability to understand technically, to artistically interpret, and to implement specific suggestions from the film director.
50:965:373 Improvisational Theater (3) Improvisational process is examined through a progression of choice-making exercises related to spontaneous composition for the stage. Work with impulse and imaginative freedom are featured elements in making theater from scratch.
50:965:380 History of Theater I (3) A survey from the classical period through the 17th century, with emphasis on the major periods, typical plays, performance theories, important figures, and major playhouses and forms of production. Western and non-Western traditions will be examined. The two courses in this series need not be taken in sequence.
50:965:381 Modern Drama (3) A survey from the 18th century to the present, with emphasis on the major periods, typical plays, performance theories, important figures, and major playhouses and forms of production.  Western and non-Western traditions will be examined.
50:965:382 Lighting Design (3) Fundamentals of lighting design, including history and theories of design and electricity, drafting, and practical application.
Prerequisite: 50:965:241 or permission of instructor.
50:965:425 Postproduction (3) Explores postproduction techniques for animation, video, film, and audio. Focuses on the production related aspects of rendering, converting, importing, exporting, compositing, effects, and sound. Prerequisite: 50:965:125 or 50:080:386 or permission of instructor.
50:965:471 Acting III (3) Advanced problems in acting theories and styles with an emphasis on Shakespeare. Prerequisites: 50:965:271 and 371 or permission of instructor.
50:965:496 Senior Project (BA) Senior theater majors are required to register for this seminar. Guidance for final projects: performance, research, or internship; 2-3 credits.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732-932-info (4636) or colonelhenry.rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: Campus Information Services.

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