Spring 2023 German BC3105 section 001

Comical Expression in Multicult Lit/Film

COMIC EXPRSN: GERMAN LIT/

Call Number 00030
Day & Time
Location
TR 2:40pm-3:55pm
307 Milbank Hall (Barnard)
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Erk Grimm
Type LECTURE
Course Description

This course is designed for participants who are interested in learning more about the role of humor in 20th/21st-c. literature and film. The survey begins with an introduction to key elements of the comical in literature and film, including slapstick, clowning, mime, or stunts. Discussions revolve around the issue of how or whether humor is universally recognizable or whether it is regionally, historically, and culturally defined. To shed light on this difficult question we will consider both historical and geographical settings. In close studies of popular films and literary texts we will examine the characters’ proclivities and discuss their gender-based perspectives as well as the influence of racial, religious or age-related identities. Our weekly readings—which include excerpts from major novels, selected scenes from films as well as short stories--provide us with rich and instructive examples of how eating habits, choice of food, calendrical events (holiday vs. weekday) may be related to the formation and expression of cultural identity. Romantic comedies reveal not only personal preferences and the joy of eating—they also signal collective taste patterns and indicate what kind of fantasies or constraints have governed the daily or festive dietary practices from the early 20th c. on. While the comical is first and foremost represented in time-honored genres such as comedies  or jokes, we will concentrate on the modern tradition in this course. This approach allows us to address the social, political, and cultural issue of multiculturalism and to build bridges between individual text/film and their historical contexts in the German-speaking countries. The emphasis of the course lies on a critical investigation of how cultural identity is related to self-expression and to physical interaction on the page, the stage or the screen. The course is taught in English, all readings are in English, and there are no prerequisites.

Web Site Vergil
Department German @Barnard
Enrollment 8 students (25 max) as of 9:07PM Thursday, April 25, 2024
Subject German
Number BC3105
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Campus Barnard College
Section key 20231GERM3105X001