Religion and American
Film
Spring 1999
January 19:
Approaches to the Study of Religion in Film
January 21: Social
Reform and Early Cinema
Film: Regeneration
(Raoul Walsh, 1915)
January 26 and 28:
Imagining Religious and Racial Others
Film: Broken
Blossoms, or The Yellow Man and the Girl (D.W. Griffith, 1919)
- Gina Marchetti, Romance and the Yellow
Peril: Race, Sex, and Discursive Strategies in Hollywood Fiction, chapter 2
- Kevin Brownlow, Behind the Mask of Innocence
- Sex, Violence, Prejudice and Crime: Films of Social Conscience in the Silent Era,
320-341
- Interview with Lillian Gish
(1927)
- Sam Fox Moving Picture Music Volume 1 (1913):
(requires a sound card and a midi player)
Chinese Music; Oriental Music
February 2 and 4:
Religious Voices
Film: The Jazz
Singer (Alan Crosland, 1927)
February 9 and 11:
Hollywood Pictures an All-Black World
Film: Hallelujah!
(King Vidor, 1929)
- Judith Weisenfeld, "For Rent: `Cabin in
the Sky': Race, Religion, and Representational Quagmires in American Film," Semeia
74 (1996): 147-165
- Jessica Howard, "Hallelujah!:
Transformation in Film," African-American Review (Fall 1996): 441-451.
February 16 and 18:
Gender, Religion, and Censorship
Film: The Miracle
Woman (Frank Capra, 1931)
- Lea Jacobs, The Wages of Sin: Censorship and
the Fallen Woman Film, 1928-1942, chapters 1 and 3
- "The Production Code," in John
Belton, ed., Movies and Mass Culture
February 23 and 25:
Black Independents and Religious Melodrama
Film: The Blood of
Jesus (Spencer Williams, 1941)
- Thomas Cripps, Black Film As Genre,
selections.
March 2 and 4:
Picturing Catholics in Pluralist America
Film: The Bells of
St. Mary's (Leo McCarey, 1945)
- Mary Gordon: "Father Chuck: A Reading of Going
My Way and The Bells of St. Marys, or Why Priests Made Us Crazy," South
Atlantic Quarterly 93 (Summer 1994): 591-601.
- Francis G. Couvares, "Hollywood, Main Street and
the Church: Trying to Censor the Movies Before the Production Code," in Francis G.
Couvares, ed., Movie Censorship and American Culture
March 9 and 11:
Religious Passing and the Post-War Message Movie
Film: Gentleman's
Agreement (Elia Kazan, 1947)
- Stephen J. Whitfield, "Our American Jewish
Heritage: The Hollywood Version," American Jewish History 75 (March 1986):
322-340
- Rogin, Blackface, White Noise, chapter 7
SPRING BREAK
March 23 and 25: The Bible Epic
Film: The Ten Commandments (Cecil B. Demille, 1956)
- Alan Nadel, "God's Law and the Wide
Screen: The Ten Commandments as Cold War 'Epic'," PMLA: Publications of the Modern
Language Association of America 108:3 (May 1993): 415-30.
- Thomas Pauly, "The Way to Salvation: The
Hollywood Blockbuster of the 1950s," Prospects: An Annual Journal of American
Cultural Studies 5 (1980): 467-487.
- Stephen Powers, David J. Rothman,
StanleyRothman, "Religious Decline," in Hollywoods America: Social and
Political Themes in Motion Pictures, 120-137.
March 30 and April
1: American Film Takes on Fundamentalism
Film: Inherit the Wind
(Stanley Kramer, 1960)
April 6 and 8: Religion
and Horror
Film: The Exorcist
(William Friedkin, 1973)
- Mark Kermode, The Exorcist (British Film
Institute, 1997), selections
April 13 and 15:
Memory and Black Feminist Cinema
Film: Daughters of the
Dust (Julie Dash, 1993)
- Joel Brouwer, "Repositioning: Center and
Margin in Julie Dash's Daughters of The Dust," African American Review 29
(Spring 1995):5-16
- Secrets
and Whispers Home Page
April 20 and 22: A
Saint is Born
Film: Household
Saints (Nancy Savoca, 1993)
- "The Domus-Centered Society," in
Robert A. Orsi, The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian
Harlem, 1880-1950
- Edvige Giunta, "The Quest for True Love:
Ethnicity in Nancy Savoca's Domestic Film Comedy," MELUS 22 (Summer '97),
75-89
- Aaron Baker and Juliann Vitullo,
"Mysticism and the Household Saints of Everyday Life," in Voices in Italian
Americana 7: 2 (Fall 1996): 55-68.
April 27 and 29: The New
Southern Religion
Film: The Apostle
(Robert Duvall, 1997)