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The English Department's main office is in Muenzinger D110.

ENGL 3246: Topics in Popular Culture - American Film Comedy (Spring 2020)

Gold Diggers

This class will engage in close readings of thirteen or fourteen American feature films and a number of shorts that best typify distinctly American genres like screwball comedy, or American treatments of standard genres like slapstick comedy, farce, satire, and black comedy.  We will trace several motifs - the romantic couple, acceleration of movement, the team, the outcast - through several films.  Using classical, traditional and contemporary theory and criticism, we will attempt to arrive at general and specific definitions of the comic.  While trying to define comic films, we will be more generally concerned with defining the impulse toward comedy: why do we laugh?  At what and whom do we laugh?  Do we always laugh at the same things?  Is there really a national humor?  What contribution can neurology, sociology and psychology make to the study of film humor?  What affinities exist between film comedy and literary humor?  

The critical reading will range from the straightforward to the advanced, and will be drawn from both film theory and theories of the comic.  We will examine several figures drawn from antiquity, including Cary Grant, Laura Mulvey, Katharine Hepburn, Sigmund Freud, Woody Allen, Rosalind Russell, Henri Bergson, Charles Chaplin, Clark Gable, Plato, Frank Capra, Jacques Lacan, Billy Wilder, Ruth Gordon, Aristotle, Robert Downey, Sr., Robert Benchley, Karl Jung, Groucho Marx, Molly Haskell, and Luigi Pirandello. 

Taught by Dr. Mark Winokur.