Ancient World in Film ANCH2021  - Details

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Later Year Course


Offered By: School of Humanities
Academic Career: Undergraduate
Course Subject: Ancient History
Offered in: First Semester, 2010
Unit Value: 6 units
Course Description:

The course investigates the ways in which the worlds of ancient Greece and Rome are depicted in film in order to suggest that these films illuminate such contemporary concerns as race relations, gender, religion and political power. Particular attention will be paid to major historical events, social and political movements (300, Spartacus), charismatic leaders, personalities and celebrity (Alexander, Cleopatra), and popular entertainment and spectacle (Troy, Gladiator).  The complexity of translating ancient literary works including tragedy (Iphighenia) and the novel (Satyricon) into the modern, visual medium of film foregrounds the ways in which the material of the ancient world must be adapted and reinterpreted.

Learning Outcomes:

By the end of the course, students should be able to:

    1. Speak and write with authority on the films under study;
    2. Identify and critically assess the key concepts and themes raised by the depiction of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds in film;
    3. Use specific examples to explain key concepts and themes
    4. Compare cultural experience of those in the ancient world with that of the modern world as represented by film
Indicative Assessment:

2,000 word essay (40%);

Tutorial participation and presentations (25%);

2-hour exam (35%).

Workload:

2-hour weekly screenings;

1-hour weekly lecture;

1-hour weekly tutorial

Areas of Interest: Classics and Ancient History and Film Studies
Recommended Courses:

ANCH1013 or ANCH1014 /HIST1019

FILM1002 and/or FILM1003

Majors/Specialisations: Classics, Ancient History, and Film Studies
Academic Contact: Dr Dietrich