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Lecturer(s)
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Course content
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Preliminary programme: 1. The onset of sound 2. Hollywood and the triumph of the studio system 3. Genres in the American film industry (case studies) 4. Documentary and propaganda 5. France 6. Italy 7. Great Britain 8. Germany 9. Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union 10. India and China 11. Japan 12. The transformation of Hollywood and the rise of the independents
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Learning activities and teaching methods
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unspecified
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Learning outcomes
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The course is a continuation of DSFI1. The lecture series provides an introduction to the history of world cinema from the introduction of sound in the late 1920s and early 1930s to the late 1950s and early 1960s (the advent of the New Wave). Attention is given to the development of the film form as well as the institutional, technological, political, social and cultural conditions of film production, distribution and consumption. Key figures are presented rather selectively in the form of case studies, with the primary emphasis on the broader historical context. Individual lectures focus on the Hollywood industrial model as well as the situation in selected European and Asian national cinemas.
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Prerequisites
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unspecified
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Assessment methods and criteria
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unspecified
Completion of a written test (success rate of at least 70%); knowledge of the required literature; viewing 12 films of the lecturer's choice (see Moodle).
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Recommended literature
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Bordwell, David a Kristin Thompson. (2007). Dějiny filmu. Praha.
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