Course Info: HACU-0198

CourseHACU-0198 Radical Visualities
Long TitleRadical Visualities: Latin America and Latino Politics and Film
Term2018S
Note(s) Satisfies Distribution
Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson HallüAdele Simmons Hall WLHü112 on M,WüT from 4:00-5:20ü6:30-9:00
FacultyAlexis Salas
Capacity23
Available13
Waitlist0
Distribution(s) Culture, Humanities, and Languages
Cumulative Skill(s)Independent Work
Multiple Cultural Perspectives
Writing and Research
Additional InfoIn this course, students are expected to spend 8-10 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Description

Understanding cinema as one of the most active forces in the visual, political, and social structure of place, we will screen and discuss films which have acted as social agents in the Americas. We will read major thinkers on class, social movements, and colonialism such as Hegel, Marx, Fanon, Malcom X, Castro, Marti, and Anzaldua. Thinking in dialogue with manifestos and cultural histories, we will screen films that challenge the narrative structures, cinematic techniques, notions of political activism, means of distribution, and even the very notion of cinema. In concert, the proposals of these radical visualities will foment understandings of the moving image's capacity to enact discourses and changes in society, culture, and history. Thematic topics include cultural cannibalism, neo-colonization, cultural difference in theoretical paradigms, Third Cinema, plagiarism and cultural appropriation, the mockumentary, mestizaje (cultural mixing) and cultural syncretism, the history of anthropology and racial typing, the 1968 student movement and massacre, sur-realism (sur/realism from the Global South), as well as self-representation and indigenous cinema. Projects include two creative works based in the films screened as well as film analysis. Knowledge of Spanish, Portuguese, and cinema is welcome but not necessary.