Josh Gunn wrote: >Again, I am more than a little amazed about the attitude some folk take >toward students! I find that my students are generally open to learning >about all kinds of film--from "cinema" to the "movies," as long as I seem >passionate about both. They can read Metz and Mulvey too--just have to >walk them through it. In response to this and the earlier comment that Bordwell doesn't like theory: I lead my intro students through Mulvey and most of them get it, and while they don't always buy the theory, they enjoy seeing how theory is used to support a particular argument about a film (plus it helps them to feel smart when they figure her out). I then have them read Noel Carroll's response to Mulvey, and then introduce them to cognitivism and then formalism. From there, I show them how similar theoretical concepts underlie the Bordwell-Thompson analytical approach in Film Art, which they've been reading for about five weeks prior to this. Students have a tendency to accept info-laden intro textbooks like Film Art as "the truth," and it's helpful to show them that even though it may seem like a simple or even dry approach, there are still complex theoretical principles in play that affect how the information is presented, and these are principles that some in the field disagree with, just as some disagree with Mulvey. Christine Becker University of Notre Dame ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu