Friday, April 27, 2018

Week Fifteen: Final Evaluation Conference

You should have signed up by now for your Individual Review appointment. If you didn't, email me for a time slot. Please complete all your blog posts. Please fill out the on-line course evaluation before coming to your conference meeting. I look forward to talking to each of you on Monday April 30, 8:30 to 11:30. Remember you only have to come for your appointment time.

Friday, April 20, 2018

Week Fourteen: Commenting and Social Media

Please finish your post for last week in which you curated someone or something that has significance for you or your work. This week I would like you to mediate a topic of social activism you are interested in.  You should include links to sites that give us background or explain the topic you are interested in and you should include sites that show us how to get involved. In addition I would like you to look at comment on someone else's post for last week. 

In class we will consider aspects of activism and other conditions of social media My friend and colleague Dr. Iva Petkova will be a visiting lecturer and we will have time to converse about the issues she raises during the class.  

For those who have signed up to have your final review this week, please have all your blogs posted by Sunday. If you haven't filled out the online course evaluation, please do so.

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Week Thirteen: Curate Yourself

What should be read, watch or listened to in this course? This week I am asking you to curate the course yourselves. Choose something you think would be important for us to consider and that falls within the parameters of a course in Literature and Media Studies. Include links and pictures to the original material if possible. Together with the link, include a discussion of why you think the material you have chosen is important for us to read or view. Why is this work important to you? Why should more people come to know this work?

Here are some links to the work by and articles about the artist, Molly Crabapple.  At age 33, I think she represents an inspiring balance between art and activism, using her art to humanize issues that she feels need to be brought to wider attention and understanding. 

We are going to read this story in class today.

Meet Molly Crabapple. Smithsonian Article about her. This is a general overview of Molly Crabapple and her work as an activist artist. The article praises her engagement and interviews her about her work.

A Short Interview with Molly Crabapple about her memoir.

Molly Crabapple Explains How You Can Be an Artist and an Activist

Molly Crabapple Art-Journalism:

What Life is Like Inside the City of Aleppo

Portraits of Syrian Refugees

Excerpt from Drawing Blood

Special Prostitution Courts and the Myth of Rescuing Sex Workers

On Photoshop, Feminism, and Truth

Conversation with Art Spiegelman

Molly Crabapple Draws Guantanamo's Camp X-Ray

Above are links to texts about and by Molly Crabapple. 

Monday, March 26, 2018

Week Eleven: Long Form Television

This week we are experiencing and discussing work made in recent long form television. In class last week, we discussed the ways in which we can talk about a media event in terms of media dependent topics, those effects of the event that seem dependent on the media in which the event is executed, and media independent topics, those effects of the event that are common to most media experiences. In the case of our discussion of the graphic novel we considered questions that arose about the work that were inquiries related to it's performance as a graphic novel as well as questions that were not dependent on the medium in which it was expressed.

Common effects might include themes, reading character, empathy, worldbuilding, the sorts of topics we might discuss in conversing or writing about books, movies, comics, plays, etc. Specific media dependent effects in long form television might include, for example,  discussion about how specific formal aspects of long form television shape the audience experience, what effects flow from the practice of binge watching, what changes occur when events are streamed instead of broadcast. There are many effects that can be discussed, when you write your blog post for this week, feel free to observe your own media effect. When writing your thoughts about this , it is usually best to stick to one observation and consider its full consequences instead of trying to briefly cover a number of possible effects.

Assignment for this Week: From the list below, watch as much as you can of a particular title in streaming television. Choose one that you have not watched before. I have listed works from Netflix, Amazon Video and some web series that you can watch on various platforms and often for free. Several of the web series are actually short form and not long- form TV but they do invite binge watching. A number of genres are represented including comedies, superheroes, and animation.  Just choose one series to view and to discuss on your blog and in class next time. Write on your blog about one of the media dependent effects that you observed in your experience of binge watching. Please pick something to watch that you have not watched before. 

My suggestion is to watch The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel or Good Girls Revolt on Amazon Prime video which gives you a long for television series  that fits in with a number of other works we have considered this semester.  If you are looking for a very light quirky comedy try the Detectorists, one of my favorite series from England. If you must have a hit of Studio Ghibli, try Ronja the Robber's Daughter.

If you have to stay on Netflix, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell is one of my favorite adaptions of a genre novel.  Godless is an interesting take on the western. There are several very interesting takes on teen life including Riverdale, 13 Reasons Why, and Everything Sucks

If you don't have access to a streaming service I have put some links to some online series you can access.

NetFlix

Babylon Berlin
The End of the F***ing World
Godless
Altered Carbon

Atypical
Stranger Things
American Vandal

Sense8
Jessica Jones
Master of None
Daredevil
A Series of Unfortunate Events
Riverdale
Travelers
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
Jane the Virgin
13 Reasons Why
Everything Sucks!
Black Mirror
Sherlock

Orange is the New Black
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell

Here is a link to the common used secret codes to get Netflix genres you might like.

Amazon Video

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
The Man in the High Castle

Mozart in the Jungle
Mr. Robot
Transparent
The Americans
Good Girls Revolt
Lark Rise to Candleford
Catastrophe

Detectorists
Flight of the Conchords
Ronja the Robber's Daughter

Hulu

The Handmaid's Tale
Fargo

Difficult People
Dead Like Me
Broad City
The I.T. Crowd
Spaced
Twin Peaks


Web Series

Neurotica
Bagdad, Florida
City Girl
Eighty-Sixed
Junior
Let Me Die a Nun
195 Lewis

Whole Day Down
Break-ups
Ted and Gracie
Very Mary Kate
Wainy Days
My Gimpy Life
Waco Valley
Husbands
F to 7th
H+ The Digital Series
Neil's Puppet Dreams
The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl
The Guild



Joss Whedon talks about how binging tv isn't necessarily a good thing.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Week Nine: Voice and The Auteur Theory

Poster for Persona by Ingmar Bergman
Sometimes we think of cultural workers as having a distinctive "voice" in their work. Themes, locations, subjects, motifs, style, lighting, viewpoints, word choices, topics, accent, are just some of the elements that can make up the unique voice of an individual artist. Filmmakers with distinctive voices are often called "auteurs."  This week you are to watch three movies by a particular director and to write a response discussing how the three works you chose exhibit common themes or other elements that are attributes assigned to the personality of the director as an author of the works. In other words, describe the author's voice in these films.

(Or, alternatively, you could argue they are not an auteur or that the term "auteur" should not be applied in the critical discussion of film.)

I am asking you to choose three films by any one director on the following list.


Francois Truffaut
Federico Fellini
Ingmar BergmanMichelangelo Antonioni
Robert AltmanAkira Kurosawa
Satyajit RayMaya Deren
Jane CampionStan Brakhage
Peter GreenawayAndrei Tarkovsky
Sally PotterMira Nair
Paul Thomas AndersonSofia Coppola
Jean-Luc GodardTom Tykwer
Krzysztof KieslowskiWes Anderson
Jacques TatiMike Leigh

Link that helps to explain an author's tone.

Link that helps to explain an author's voice.

Check the Course Resources Page for a few resources for this assignment.


Friday, February 23, 2018

Week Eight: Adaptation


Fiction Writer and Activist for North Korean Refugees Krys Lee
We have discussed how texts are textiles with threads of context and subtext that we see as patterns of all sorts. It is these patterns that we work to perceive and relate to one another when we read. This week's assignment emphasizes seeing those textual patterns through a specific and applied point of view.

Reading/Writing Assignment: Before coming to class please read one of the screenplays linked to the course resource page. You will find a number of them available to read somewhat down the page. Writing from the position of one of the major collaborators in the work--the Director, the Set Designer, the Director of Photography, the Costume Designer, an Actor of one of the parts--write a statement (memoradum) of 250-350 words that would explain the main elements of how you would approach the script when executing your role in its hypothetical production.  Choose a screenplay to read that is for a movie you have never seen. Please wait to see the movie until after you have written your blog post. 

Adapting a Literary Text to a Film

Link to Interview with Krys Lee

Friday, February 16, 2018

Week Six: Writing and Reading from Diverse Positions

Photo by Jessie Cohen and Ramsey Matthews
Reading Assignment: This week's featured novel is Marriage of  a Thousand Lies by Sri Lankan-American author S J Sindu.  It can be purchased through the bookstore, through Amazon either in hard copy or electronic copy. There is also an audible version.  This book is the first novel by Sindu and has received significant notice and acclaim as a important new work in queer literature and Asian-American literature in general. For anyone interested, Sindu will be teaching a course in the Fall in Asian and Asian-American literature at Ringling. She currently teaches in the Creative Writing major and in the Liberal Arts Program. 

In an interview on The Rumpus, Sindu discusses in detail the issues of the novel in relation to Tamil culture and the literary world in general. She also makes some useful recommendations for other books to read that explore LGBT issues in a South-Asian context. Follow this link. 

In the interview Sindu recounts:

" I wanted to explore the things that weren’t really being explored in South Asian American fiction. A lot of South Asians I knew were considering or were in straight marriages—even marriages of convenience. There was a lot of pressure for me to get an arranged marriage and conform. But it never actually occurred to me to do it. There was absolutely no way I wanted to enter into an arranged marriage or a marriage of convenience, so I was also fascinated by the kind of person who would make that decision. As I was writing it, this novel was the anti-me story. Lucky is very different from me as a person, which is why it was an interesting story for me to write. But I also knew that when the novel was published, people would just assume that I was Lucky, that this is my story. Part of this is because people assume that you write what you know, and the assumption is especially enforced for women/non-binary writers, queer writers, and writers of color. This brings up a lot of issues of privilege and power. There’s an assumption of white cisgender heterosexual maleness as the default, so any deviation from that and people question whether you’re just writing a thinly veiled memoir."

In Class: we will be watching the movie, Circumstance (2011) directed by Maryam Keshavarz. The film, like the book, deals with the conflicts between generations in traditional societies, especially in respect to LGBT relationships and identities. After the movie,  Sindu will join us for conversation and a session of questions and answers about her novel and writing in general.

Writing Assignment: Before or after class please post your response to the experience of reading the book. You may want to wait until you see the movie and have a chance to talk with Sindu before you make your post, but please write your post before Wednesday so I can include it in my mid-term evaluation of your blog.

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Week Five: Privilege as a Position

Reading Assignment:  This week we are reading a fairly short novel from the early years of this millenium, Cosmopolis by Don DeLillo, first published in 2003. Be prepared for a certain challenge because the author is asking you to read a story that does not have an easily relatable central character with whom you are not asked to bond emotionally but to observe over the course of a day. Whether you like the character or the book is really not the point here, but rather what you make of it as an experience and how articulate you can be about the experience when communicating with others. Abandon the continuum of like/dislike, observe the observer.  Remember this text is not an attempt at recreating in some way "real" life. It is a story, intentionally and rather substantially, contrived. Can we discuss it without judgement or reference to our prejudices? 

Writing Assignment:  I have curated this class to bring certain works to your attention. I have chosen this work to open up questions of privilege. When you write your response you might talk about whether or not the work addresses issues of privilege,  does it do so effectively or tangentially? What does it appear to say about issues of privilege. 

In Class: In class we will watch the movie 2012 version of the book which was directed by David Cronenberg and stars Robert Pattinson.  Our discussion is a joint investigation, I haven't taught the book before, and like you, have read it once.

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Week Four: Reading from a Position

Reading Assignment: This week I am asking you to read as much as you can of Jill Lepore's book, The Secret History of Wonder Woman.  She is an historian and a writer and discusses many of the contexts in which the orginal texts of Wonder Woman are embedded. In addition, to understand the character of Wonder Woman, you can read any of the comics I have put on the course resource page including some of the orginal versions of the character, of the character during the 1970s revival of the character and some from recent versions of the character.

Link to Interview with Gail Simone who recently wrote the character.

Writing Assignment: This week's writing assignment will start in-class. Using any of the information you gathered from reading The Secret History of Wonder Woman or from reading any of the Wonder Woman stories consider how you would design a Wonder Woman Theme Park World. What aspects of the character would you represent? What story would you tell? From what postition would you tell the story? How would visitors interact with the world and what aspects of the Wonder Woman story, both the historical background and the fictional character, would be highlighted? We will begin this assignment in this week's class, and you can choose to finish it for this week's post or simply respond to the book in the usual way. 


Monday, January 22, 2018

Week Three: Reading Mythology

This week we are reading True Grit by Charles Portis and considering the idea of a what a "western" might be. What are the assumptions that frequently accompany works in the genre of the western? 

In addition to looking at the way the mediascape can be divided into genres, we will also consider the deep cultural assumptions that go to shaping positions in the mediaverse like "national identity," and how these assumptions can become mythology, the often unquestioned expectations that frame our cultural experiences.  In thinking about True Grit, consider the values embedded in the work and how they are represented in this book. We will also consider how the presentation of values in this work might rise to the level of mythology.

Writing Assignment: Write a blog post describing how this novel and its film versions reflect or comment on American mythology. What assumptions about the nature of humans, about society and morality are embodied in this novel and the film versions. After you read the novel, please watch one/or both film versions of True Grit, the 2010 version directed by the Coen Brothers starring Jeff Bridges and the 1969 version directed by Henry Hathaway and starring John Wayne if you can. 
Costume Exhibit for the 2010 Movie of True Grit directed by the Coen Brothers
Myths of the Western Genre



Link to Edison recording of Mary from 1878.

Thursday, January 11, 2018

Week Two: Austenworld Case Study of a Storyverse

Illustration from Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
Writing Assignment from First Class: For the first post on your blog for this course, please write a Prologue for yourself, much like the Wife of Bath has a prologue to the Tale we read of hers in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. In your prologue give us a sense of where you are coming from as a reader. What do we need to know about you in order to best understand what you say and perception that you have. What are the assumptions that govern your sense of the world and how it works?  Try to give us 250-350 words on this prologue to you.

Reading Assignment: For our next class we are reading and viewing some texts that are part of the Jane Austen storyverse. The central text we will consider is Pride and Prejudice, the novel written by Jane Austen.  There are a number of remix variants that you might consider reading instead including Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, soon to be released as a motion picture.  Because it is public domain Pride and Prejudice can be downloaded online for free from several sites. There are free versions of the text for kindles and nooks, and several audiobook versions, including free ones available. Consult the course resource page for links to texts for this week. 

Audiobooks: Listening to audiobook versions of readings for this class is perfectly acceptable and can be a good way to "read" the texts because you can do some other things while listening to the story being read to you. This is also a good way to deal with required texts if you have a history of difficulty with reading. You can download software that will read any pdf version of a text to you on your laptop. Some students do this for in-class reading as well, using headphones and their laptop. If your native language is something other than English, you are welcome to read the works, like this week's choice, that will be translated into your first language, if you choose.

Featured Film: The featured movie for the next class is Austenland (2013) directed by Jarusha Hess and produced by Stephanie Meyer, the author of the Twilight series. The most complete visual version of the orginal text is probably The Pride and Prejudice Mini-series (1995)starring Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle. The is the favorite of many Janeites including the central character in Austenland. I am also suggesting Pride and Prejudice: A Latter-day Comedy (2003) dir. Andrew Black as an interesting movie varient with a production background that has influenced Austenland, and expecially Bride and Prejudice (2004) dir. Gurinder Chadha in which the story is turned into a Bollywood musical to excellent effect. The most recent big budget movie version of  Pride and Prejudice (2005) directed by Joe Wright is worth investigating especially to see this 18th century story take on a more 19th century reading and adaptation. Please watch at least one Jane Austen influenced film before the next class.

Here is a link to a page of Jane Austen Films organized chronologically.

Please read or listen to a version of Pride and Prejudice and bring your laptop or tablet to class. 

Next Week: We will be discussing genre and literature and reading a Great American Novel, True Grit by Charles Portis.



Pride and Prejudice and Zombies  fan art 

Friday, January 5, 2018

Week One: Your Position in the Mediascape

In Monday's first class in Literature and Media Studies we will discuss the oral tradition and the practice of the storyteller. We will also consider the patterns of paradigm shift in the media environment by reading and discussing one of the important early examples of English LIterature.

Before coming to class I am asking you to read The Wife of Bath's Prologue and The Wife of Bath's Tale from the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. Chaucer's story is written in what we now call "Middle English" which is a version of the English spoken during the Middle Ages (from roughly 1150-1470. It differs from contemporary English enough to be difficult to read without an expert knowledge of the dialect.  You can try the original here, 
http://www.librarius.com/canttran/wftltrfs.htm
where you will find both the prologue and tale in Middle English.
Here is a link to probably the best way to read the text, which is an interlinear translation which means each line of the orginal text is followed by a modern translation. Here is a link to that version of the the text,
https://sites.fas.harvard.edu/~chaucer/teachslf/wbt-par.htm#PROLOGUE

If you must, you can read the summary of the Prologue and Tale here, at the Cliff's Notes site, where there is a good condensed background on the Canterbury Tales and Chaucer as well as a plain language summary of the works.

You can have the prologue and tale read to you on youtube. Here is a link to those pages: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Du1ryviObsU for the tale and the prologue is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bj7VmvkgCBs  There are several possible audio versions to choose from. 

In class we will review the basic policies of the class and the attendance and grading policies. Attendance will be taken each week and reported electronically.

Students can expect to read something and write something each week in the form of weekly assignments. Please bring your laptop or tablet to every class. Many weeks you can expect to read and write in-class.

All the writing done for this class must be mounted on a blog the student maintains for the semester. Blogger is the preferred choice as a blogging environment but you can use others if you insist. Please leave the privacy settings off and remember anyone can read comments you make in your blog. Please start a new blog for this course and don't use an old blog you have already created as to avoid possible confusion. Once you have created a blog please email me the url for your blog, indicating that you are in the Literature and Media Studies class.

Please read the Chaucer selection before you come to class on Monday morning I will see you then.


We wiwork on understanding positions in the mediascape and methods of defining our own lineage and outlooks. We are what we behold as much as we are what we eat. We will begin the class with a discussion of High and Low and a review of the course syllabus.

Seven Lively Arts by Gilbert Seldes

Next class we will be reading Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice or alternatively another work from the Austen storyverse. After reading the novel or the alternative, students will write a blog post discussing why the work does or does not have relevance to relationships today.

Remember next week is the Martin Luther King holiday and there will be no class. You will have two weeks, then to read Pride and Prejudice.