MEDIA 716 : Love in/Loving the Cinema

Arts

2024 Semester Two (1245) (30 POINTS)

Course Prescription

Critically examines the theme of love in the cinema. Looks at why the love story has been such a staple of movie narratives and what films can teach us about love. Also explores the nature of the love of cinema itself, cinephilia.

Course Overview

This course looks at theme of love in the cinema. Why is it that the love story — the state of being in love, of searching for or recovering from love — has been such a staple of movie narratives? What can films teach us about love? And what about the love of cinema itself, cinephilia? Through a number of theoretical readings that draw on a psychoanalytical understanding of the love experience — including texts by Alain Badiou, Roland Barthes, Stanley Cavell, Jacques Lacan, Jacques-Alain Miller, Jean-Luc Marion, Jean-Luc Nancy, Adam Phillips, Renata Salecl, Slavoj Žižek and Alenka Zupancic — we will address the working structures of the love event in the cinema from the exquisite anguish of feeling in Charlie Chaplin’s City Lights to love as a repetitive, uncontrollable force in Wong Kar-wai’s In the Mood for Love; from the repeated refrain of ‘I love you’ in Love Letters to the impossibility of love in the romantic melodrama Now Voyager. We will explore how love in the cinema sustains and makes bearable the experience of love. How the love experience inaugurates a search for signs of love not only in the actions and bearing of the beloved but in the wider world.

Course Requirements

No pre-requisites or restrictions

Capabilities Developed in this Course

Capability 3: Knowledge and Practice
Capability 4: Critical Thinking
Capability 5: Solution Seeking
Capability 6: Communication
Capability 8: Ethics and Professionalism

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will be able to:
  1. Demonstrate specific knowledge of the aesthetic construction of cinema. (Capability 3 and 4)
  2. Explain how film both illustrates and critiques themes of inter-personal relationships and love. (Capability 4 and 5)
  3. Situate film within a broad understanding of human ethics. (Capability 4, 5 and 8)
  4. Communicate interpretations of films and their philosophical content. (Capability 3, 4, 5 and 6)
  5. Research issues pertaining to cinema and the general field of philosophy. (Capability 3, 4 and 5)

Assessments

Assessment Type Percentage Classification
Presentation 15% Individual Coursework
Proposal and Literature Review 25% Individual Coursework
Essay 60% Individual Coursework

This assessment structure is tentative.

Workload Expectations

This course is a standard 30 point course and students are expected to spend 20 hours per week involved in each 30 point course that they are enrolled in.

For this course, you can expect 3 hours of seminar, 2 hours of film viewing, 10 hours of reading and thinking about the content and 5 hours of work on assignment preparation each week.

Delivery Mode

Campus Experience

Attendance is expected at scheduled activities including seminars to complete components of the course.
Lectures will not be available as recordings. 
The activities for the course are scheduled as a standard weekly timetable.


Learning Resources

Course materials are made available in a learning and collaboration tool called Canvas which also includes reading lists and lecture recordings (where available).

Please remember that the recording of any class on a personal device requires the permission of the instructor.

Student Feedback

At the end of every semester students will be invited to give feedback on the course and teaching through a tool called SET or Qualtrics. The lecturers and course co-ordinators will consider all feedback and respond with summaries and actions.

Your feedback helps teachers to improve the course and its delivery for future students.

Class Representatives in each class can take feedback to the department and faculty staff-student consultative committees.

   

Academic Integrity

The University of Auckland will not tolerate cheating, or assisting others to cheat, and views cheating in coursework as a serious academic offence. The work that a student submits for grading must be the student's own work, reflecting their learning. Where work from other sources is used, it must be properly acknowledged and referenced. This requirement also applies to sources on the internet. A student's assessed work may be reviewed for potential plagiarism or other forms of academic misconduct, using computerised detection mechanisms.

Class Representatives

Class representatives are students tasked with representing student issues to departments, faculties, and the wider university. If you have a complaint about this course, please contact your class rep who will know how to raise it in the right channels. See your departmental noticeboard for contact details for your class reps.

Inclusive Learning

All students are asked to discuss any impairment related requirements privately, face to face and/or in written form with the course coordinator, lecturer or tutor.

Student Disability Services also provides support for students with a wide range of impairments, both visible and invisible, to succeed and excel at the University. For more information and contact details, please visit the Student Disability Services’ website http://disability.auckland.ac.nz

Well-being always comes first
We all go through tough times during the semester, or see our friends struggling. There is lots of help out there - for more information, look at this Canvas page https://canvas.auckland.ac.nz/courses/33894, which has links to various support services in the University and the wider community.

Special Circumstances

If your ability to complete assessed coursework is affected by illness or other personal circumstances outside of your control, contact a member of teaching staff as soon as possible before the assessment is due.

If your personal circumstances significantly affect your performance, or preparation, for an exam or eligible written test, refer to the University’s aegrotat or compassionate consideration page https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/students/academic-information/exams-and-final-results/during-exams/aegrotat-and-compassionate-consideration.html.

This should be done as soon as possible and no later than seven days after the affected test or exam date.

Learning Continuity

In the event of an unexpected disruption, we undertake to maintain the continuity and standard of teaching and learning in all your courses throughout the year. If there are unexpected disruptions the University has contingency plans to ensure that access to your course continues and course assessment continues to meet the principles of the University’s assessment policy. Some adjustments may need to be made in emergencies. You will be kept fully informed by your course co-ordinator/director, and if disruption occurs you should refer to the university website for information about how to proceed.

 

Student Charter and Responsibilities

The Student Charter assumes and acknowledges that students are active participants in the learning process and that they have responsibilities to the institution and the international community of scholars. The University expects that students will act at all times in a way that demonstrates respect for the rights of other students and staff so that the learning environment is both safe and productive. For further information visit Student Charter https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/students/forms-policies-and-guidelines/student-policies-and-guidelines/student-charter.html.

Disclaimer

Elements of this outline may be subject to change. The latest information about the course will be available for enrolled students in Canvas.

In this course students may be asked to submit coursework assessments digitally. The University reserves the right to conduct scheduled tests and examinations for this course online or through the use of computers or other electronic devices. Where tests or examinations are conducted online remote invigilation arrangements may be used. In exceptional circumstances changes to elements of this course may be necessary at short notice. Students enrolled in this course will be informed of any such changes and the reasons for them, as soon as possible, through Canvas.

Published on 22/11/2023 09:45 a.m.