ENROLL Course Search
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Alternatives: For requirement lists, please refer to the current catalog. For up-to-the-minute enrollment information, use the "Search for Classes" option in The Hub. If you have any other questions, please email registrar@carleton.edu.
Your search for courses for 22/FA and with code: CAMSELECTIVE found 8 courses.
CAMS 100.00 Rock 'n' Roll in Cinema 6 credits
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 15, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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This course is designed to explore the intersection between rock music and cinema. Taking a historical view of the evolution of the "rock film," this class examines the impact of rock music on the structural and formal aspects of narrative, documentary, and experimental films and videos. The scope of the class will run from the earliest rock films of the mid-1950s through contemporary examples in ten weekly subunits.
Held for new first year students, Extra Time Required, evening screens
CAMS 177.00 Television Studio Production 6 credits
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 14, Waitlist: 0
Weitz Center 136 / Weitz Center 040
M | T | W | TH | F |
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8:30am11:00am | 8:30am11:00am |
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In this hands-on studio television production course, students learn professional studio methods and techniques for creating both fiction and nonfiction television programs. Concepts include lighting and set design, blocking actors, directing cameras, composition, switching, sound recording and scripting. Students work in teams to produce four assignments, crewing for each other's productions in front of and behind the camera, in the control room, and in post-production.
Extra Time Required
CAMS 186.00 Film Genres 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 23, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:50pm3:00pm | 1:50pm3:00pm | 2:20pm3:20pm |
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In this course we survey four or more Hollywood film genres, including but not limited to the Western, musical, horror film, comedy, and science-fiction film. What criteria are used to place a film in a particular genre? What role do audiences and studios play in the creation and definition of film genres? Where do genres come from? How do genres change over time? What roles do genres play in the viewing experience? What are hybrid genres and subgenres? What can genres teach us about society? Assignments aim to develop skills in critical analysis, research and writing.
Sophomore Priority Extra Time, Evening screenings
Waitlist for Juniors and Seniors: CAMS 186.WL0 (Synonym 65592)
CAMS 211.00 Film History II 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 14, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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Extra Time required. Evening Screenings.
CAMS 222.00 Collaborative Narrative Filmmaking 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 8, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:50pm3:00pm | 1:50pm3:00pm | 2:20pm3:20pm |
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Narrative films are the product of many specialized artists working in concert toward a shared artistic vision. In this course, students will explore the essential crew roles on narrative films and choose an area in which they would like to specialize during the making of a collaborative project. Through the term, we will move through film development, pre-production, production, post-production, and distribution with each student taking on a specific role in a group project. The term culminates in the exhibition of films that were made over the previous 10 weeks.
Prerequisite: Cinema and Media Studies 111
Extra Time Required
CAMS 258.00 Feminist and Queer Media 6 credits
Closed: Size: 25, Registered: 22, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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The focus of this course is on spectatorship—feminist, lesbian, queer, transgender. The seminar interrogates arguments about representation and the viewer’s relationship to the moving image in terms of identification, desire, masquerade, fantasy, power, time, and embodied experience. The course first explores the founding essays of psychoanalytic feminist film theory, putting these ideas into dialogue with mainstream cinema. Second, we consider the aesthetic, narrative, and theoretical interventions posed by feminist filmmakers working in contradistinction to Hollywood. Third, “queering” contemporary media, we survey challenges and revisions to feminist film theory presented by considerations of race and ethnicity, transgender experience, and queerness.
CAMS 270.00 Nonfiction 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 7, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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This course addresses nonfiction media as both art form and historical practice by exploring the expressive, rhetorical, and political possibilities of nonfiction production. A focus on relationships between form and content and between makers, subjects, and viewers will inform our approach. Throughout the course we will pay special attention to the ethical concerns that arise from making media about others' lives. We will engage with diverse modes of nonfiction production including essayistic, experimental, and participatory forms and create community videos in partnership with Carleton's Center for Community and Civic Engagement and local organizations. The class culminates in the production of a significant independent nonfiction media project.
Prerequisite: Cinema and Media Studies 111 or instructor consent
Extra Time Required
CAMS 370.00 Advanced Production Workshop I 6 credits
Closed: Size: 0, Registered: 11, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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12:30pm1:40pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm |
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In this course, students will develop a concept and complete pre-production for their CAMS production comps. Students will draw inspiration from a variety of sources that are personal, cultural, and observational, and in doing so, develop confidence in their own artistic practice and perspective. We will refine technical and formal strategies, consider audience reception, and practice giving and receiving constructive critique. Prior to registering for the course, students must submit a project proposal to the instructor. Final enrollment is based on the quality of the proposal. Note: This course is intended to prepare students for a Comps production project in winter term and it is the first in a two part sequence with CAMS 371. If you have any questions about enrolling in this course, please email the instructor.
Prerequisite: Cinema and Media Studies 111, and either Cinema and Media Studies 270 or 271 or instructor consent
Extra Time Required, Instructor Consent required, Waitlist only
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