Faculty of Arts

Table of Contents

1. Prerequisites
2. Requirements for a major
3. Honours entry
4. Honours requirements
    4.1. Pure honours
    4.2. Combined honours
5. Studying overseas
6. Further study
7. Career opportunities
8. For more information
Subject Lists
    First-year subjects
    Second/third-year subjects
    Third/fourth-year subjects
    Fourth-year subjects


Cinema studies offers a comprehensive program of study which draws on established links with industry and the professional film community. The program is underpinned by theoretical and interpretive approaches to cinema, television and new entertainment technologies that will assist students in applying this knowledge in practical and professional frameworks. Students benefit directly from the opportunity to explore the creative and professional aspects of the cinematic arts at close range with film directors, organisers of film festivals and film distribution agencies. The academic staff are leaders in their fields and endeavour to provide new and unique approaches to interactive or on-line teaching. With a particular emphasis on viewing and analysis of film, video and television, screenings are an integral part of the program. Graduates of cinema studies find employment in a range of professional capacities and organisations such as film festivals, cinema complexes, the State Film Centre, the Australian Centre of the Moving Image, the Australian Film Institute, and Film Victoria.

Cinema studies deals with the interpretation, history and theory of cinema, television, and new visual media such as computer games and theme park spaces. Subjects cover the areas of film history, Hollywood cinema, art cinemas, documentary, ethnographic film-making, Australian cinema, genre studies (horror, comedy, film noir, the love story, etc.), television, cross-media forms such as comic books, computer games and theme park attractions. Cinema is one of the major visual and aesthetic forms of the 20th and 21st centuries; studies in this area address theoretical issues of spectatorship, postmodernism, historical poetics, postcolonialism, gender, sexuality and the body.

1. Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for first-year cinema studies subjects.

The prerequisite for a second/third-year subject in cinema studies is usually 107-132 Introduction to Hollywood & Art Cinema and 107-133 Introduction to Film Theory.

Students who have completed suitable alternative first-year subjects are advised to consult with the Head of School for permission to enrol. Exemptions may also be granted when second/third-year subjects are taken as part of an approved interdepartmental program with its own entry requirements.

The prerequisite for a third/fourth-year subject in cinema studies is usually three second/third-year subjects in cinema studies (37.5 points).

2. Requirements for a major

A major in cinema studies usually consists of nine 12.5 point subjects, totalling 112.5 points. It comprises:

Subjects for the major
First year subjectsSemester
 107-132 Introduction to Hollywood & Art Cinema1
 107-133 Introduction to Film Theory2
Second/third year subjects
 106-014 Hong Kong CinemaNot Offered
 107-025 Postcolonialism and the CinemaNot Offered
 107-037 Film and the BodyNot Offered
 107-075 Art House Cinema & Film Festival CultureNot Offered
 107-076 Contemporary Hollywood CinemaNot Offered
 107-077 Television and Australian CultureNot Offered
 107-078 Italian National Cinemas2
 107-079 Feminist Film and Television Theory1
 107-080 Commodity CultureNot Offered
 107-081 Genre StudyNot Offered
 107-082 The Entertainment ExperienceNot Offered
 107-083 Film Noir: Style and HistoryNot Offered
 107-084 Surrealism and the CinemaNot Offered
 107-085 Australian CinemaNot Offered
 107-087 Contemporary Australian CinemaNot Offered
 107-088 Love Stories: Film and Narrative TheoryNot Offered
 107-258 Game Studies1
 107-267 The Cinema of Martin Scorsese2
 107-268 Myth and Media: from Homer to Hollywood1
 107-269 The Musical: From Hollywood to Bollywood2
 107-270 The 1950s: Film, Perfection & Propaganda1
 107-271 Media Matrix: Film, Media and Morality2
 760-241 Surrealism and the Creative Imagination2
 760-252 Filmic Text: Special Study1
Third/fourth year subjects
 107-405 Spectacles: Museums to Theme ParksSummer
 760-425 Film and Philosophy1
 760-426 SoundtracksNot Offered
Fourth year subjects
 102-511 Imaging Australian Spaces2
 107-403 Fine Arts 4A1, repeat 2
 107-409 Indigenous Film, Television & New MediaNot Offered
 107-421 Contemporary Film Theory1
 107-427 Film Criticism and the CanonNot Offered
 107-429 Ethnographic and Documentary Cinema2
 107-431 Postmodernism and the CinemaNot Offered
 107-432 Melodrama, Class and the CinemaNot Offered
 107-440 Hitchcock, Film and ArtNot Offered
 107-463 Dream Screen: Film and Psychoanalysis1
 107-470 The Carnivalesque and the Cinema2
 107-487 Film, Modernity and the Avant-Garde2

3. Honours entry

The prerequisites for entry to fourth-year honours in cinema studies are:

Entry to honours must be approved by the honours coordinator of the School and the Faculty of Arts honours course adviser. Forms, to be submitted to the School are available from the School office in May and September of each year.

4. Honours requirements

Honours coordinator: Dr Mark Nicholls

4.1. Pure honours

Students undertaking pure honours in cinema studies must complete:

4.2. Combined honours

Students undertaking combined honours in cinema studies and another area of study must complete:

or

5. Studying overseas

The Cinema Studies Program in the School of Art History, Cinema, Classics and Archeology teaches a cinema studies subject in the United States in the Summer Semester. See subject entry for details:

or
Email: enquiries@asatravinfo.com.au
Web: http://www.asatravinfo.com.au

6. Further study

A BA with a major in cinema studies can lead to a Graduate Diploma in Arts (Cinema Studies) or a Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Cinema Studies).

An honours degree in cinema studies can lead to MA or PhD degrees.

7. Career opportunities

Career opportunities for graduates in cinema studies are to be found in education and research, and in the arts and the film industry as administrators, media professionals, editors, reviewers, film critics and film archivists.

8. For more information

School of Art History, Cinema, Classics and Archaeology
Old Pathology Building
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
Tel +61 3 8344 5565
Email: finearts-info@unimelb.edu.au
Web: http://www.sfca.unimelb.edu.au

First-year subjects

107-132 Introduction to Hollywood & Art Cinema
107-133 Introduction to Film Theory

Second/third-year subjects

107-025 Postcolonialism and the Cinema
107-037 Film and the Body
107-075 Art House Cinema & Film Festival Culture
107-076 Contemporary Hollywood Cinema
107-077 Television and Australian Culture
107-078 Italian National Cinemas
107-079 Feminist Film and Television Theory
107-080 Commodity Culture
107-081 Genre Study
107-082 The Entertainment Experience
107-083 Film Noir: Style and History
107-084 Surrealism and the Cinema
107-085 Australian Cinema
107-087 Contemporary Australian Cinema
107-088 Love Stories: Film and Narrative Theory
107-258 Game Studies
107-267 The Cinema of Martin Scorsese
107-268 Myth and Media: from Homer to Hollywood
107-269 The Musical: From Hollywood to Bollywood
107-270 The 1950s: Film, Perfection & Propaganda
107-271 Media Matrix: Film, Media and Morality
106-014 Hong Kong Cinema
760-241 Surrealism and the Creative Imagination
760-252 Filmic Text: Special Study

Third/fourth-year subjects

107-405 Spectacles: Museums to Theme Parks
760-425 Film and Philosophy
760-426 Soundtracks

Fourth-year subjects

107-522 Cinema Studies Thesis
107-523 Cinema Studies Thesis (MYE)
107-403 Fine Arts 4A
107-409 Indigenous Film, Television & New Media
107-421 Contemporary Film Theory
107-427 Film Criticism and the Canon
107-429 Ethnographic and Documentary Cinema
107-431 Postmodernism and the Cinema
107-432 Melodrama, Class and the Cinema
107-440 Hitchcock, Film and Art
107-463 Dream Screen: Film and Psychoanalysis
107-470 The Carnivalesque and the Cinema
107-487 Film, Modernity and the Avant-Garde
102-511 Imaging Australian Spaces



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