Course Info: HACU-0240

CourseHACU-0240 Radical Collectives
Long TitleRadical Collectives: Newsreel Films of the 60s and 70s
Term2017F
Note(s) Prerequisites Required
Textbook information
Meeting InfoJerome Liebling Center 120 on M from 9:00-11:50
FacultyCynthia Madansky
Capacity16
Available7
Waitlist0
Distribution(s)
Cumulative Skill(s)Independent Work
Multiple Cultural Perspectives
Writing and Research
Additional InfoLab fee: $65. Prerequisites: Intro to Media Studies and Film Studies. In this course, students are expected to spend approximately 8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Description

"Radical Collectives" is a theory and production course that looks at the documentary films produced in the late 1960s and 1970s in the USA by the California Newsreel, the Third World Newsreel and the Newsreel collective. These films were a direct response to the political landscape in the USA, addressing and challenging the hegemonic cinematic and mainstream news discourse on local, national and international issues. The prolific body of work produced by these collectives addressed issues of race, class, and sexism, portraying amongst many other topics the student movements on campuses, the anti-Vietnam War movement, the Women's Rights movement and the Latino and Black Liberation movement. The collectives were a utopian call to democratize cinema, to abolish film authorship, and to produce work that is committed to issues that concern their communities and that would assist in reaching the goals of a more just society. In this course, students direct one short video that addresses an urgent contemporary issue in the USA.