Director: Jon Cowans
The film studies minor draws on a range of disciplines to allow
students to examine a vital modern form of cultural expression. The
18-credit minor examines film as an art form, a form of entertainment, a
business, and a political and social practice, tracing its evolution
over time and its variants in different cultures. The minor primarily
aims to develop students' abilities to think critically about a central
and highly influential facet of modern life, but it also seeks to help
prepare students who are majoring in other fields such as business to
work in the entertainment industry. All courses in the minor require and
teach writing skills.
Students completing the minor will have learned about the historical
evolution of film as an art form and a business in multiple countries;
this knowledge should include an awareness of major styles, genres,
directors, films, and controversies involving films; and major
approaches to censorship used in various times and places, as well as
arguments for and against censorship. They should be capable of thinking
critically about films, identifying and analyzing many of the
techniques they use (directing, casting, editing, etc.) to convey
messages and images. Classes will also train students in writing about
film, from reviews of individual films to essays of broader scope.