Difference between revisions of "Whodunit? Mystery and Suspense in Literature and Film"

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  | label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[Whodunit? Mystery and Suspense in Literature and Film|WHOD]]
 
  | label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[Whodunit? Mystery and Suspense in Literature and Film|WHOD]]
 
  | label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 1998
 
  | label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 1998
  | label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[BRI]], [[EST]], [[SCZ]], [[SUN]]
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  | label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[CGV]], [[LOS]]
  | label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[ASU]], [[BTH]], [[CAL]], [[CHS]], [[FRD]]
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  | label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[ASU]], [[ATN]], [[BRI]], [[BTH]], [[CAL]], [[CHS]], [[EST]], [[HAV]], [[FRD]], [[SCZ]], [[SUN]]
 
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From the CTY Summer Catalog:
 
From the CTY Summer Catalog:
  
This writing class introduces students to an intriguing genre of popular culture: mystery. What elements create a mystery? How do cinematography and sound in film build suspense? What are the literary merits of the mystery genre, and what do mysteries tell us about our culture?
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This writing class explores the techniques great writers and filmmakers use to convey mystery and suspense in popular culture. You and your classmates will learn and discuss how elements like sound and cinematography build suspense in film; the literary merits of the mystery genre, and what mysteries tell us about humanity. You’ll read works by classic mystery writers such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe, and Agatha Christie, and watch clips from early horror classics and noir films from the ’40s and ’50s. By examining characterization and plot techniques used in literature, and elements like camera angles and lighting techniques used in film, you will learn the ways writers and directors build suspense and heighten tension on the page and onscreen. You’ll also build your critical thinking skills by writing critical essays analyzing elements of mystery and suspense, and show off your own storytelling skills by writing scenes using techniques you’ve learned in the course.  
 
 
Students read classic mystery writers such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe, and Agatha Christie. They also study clips from a variety of films, including early horror classics and film noir from the forties and fifties. By examining literary techniques such as characterization and plot, as well as film techniques such as camera angles and lighting, students analyze the ways writers and directors manipulate these elements to build suspense and heighten tension on the page and the screen.
 
 
 
Students apply their knowledge of mysteries in formal critical essays and in their own brief stories and scenes.
 
  
 
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[[Category: Bristol]]
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Latest revision as of 10:58, 22 March 2023

Whodunit? Mystery and Suspense in Literature and Film
Writing Course
Course CodeWHOD
Year Opened1998
Sites OfferedCGV, LOS
Previously OfferedASU, ATN, BRI, BTH, CAL, CHS, EST, HAV, FRD, SCZ, SUN
Part of a series on
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CTY Courses
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Humanities
Foundations of Psychology
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Whodunit? Mystery and Suspense in Literature and Film
Crafting the Essay
The Graphic Novel
Math
Geometry through Art
Paradoxes and Infinities · Mathematical Modeling
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Foundations of Programming
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The Mathematics of Money · Game Theory and Economics
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Introduction to Astronomy
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Whales and Estuary Systems · The Chesapeake Bay
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Victorian Women · America in the Cold War
The Making of California · The Civil Rights Movement
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Chaos and Fractals · Introduction to Geology
Exercise Physiology · Environmental Engineering
Nuclear Science · The Critical Essay: Cinema
Medical Sciences: Pharmacology & Toxicology · The Modern City
Writing About Place: The Monterey Bay

Course Description

From the CTY Summer Catalog:

This writing class explores the techniques great writers and filmmakers use to convey mystery and suspense in popular culture. You and your classmates will learn and discuss how elements like sound and cinematography build suspense in film; the literary merits of the mystery genre, and what mysteries tell us about humanity. You’ll read works by classic mystery writers such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe, and Agatha Christie, and watch clips from early horror classics and noir films from the ’40s and ’50s. By examining characterization and plot techniques used in literature, and elements like camera angles and lighting techniques used in film, you will learn the ways writers and directors build suspense and heighten tension on the page and onscreen. You’ll also build your critical thinking skills by writing critical essays analyzing elements of mystery and suspense, and show off your own storytelling skills by writing scenes using techniques you’ve learned in the course.