Course Program and Evaluation Criteria

24 Janeiro 2022, 08:00 Cecília Maria Beecher Martins

Program 

The program will begin with a discussion of the concepts that govern the academic discourse surrounding the concepts of culture, ideology and popular culture. Students will also learn how to read popular culture objects from a semiotic perspective using the methodologies presented by Pierce and Saussure as well as Hodge’s conception of social semiotics.

While the emphasis of this program will be North American Popular Culture (esp.  USA), from the post WWII era to the early decades of the 21st century, we will begin by looking at the continent’s historic background. We will also look at the factors that permitted the shift from local and folk cultural productions to the development of popular culture endeavours with a global impact.

Working principally with popular literature, comic books & graphic novels as well as cinema and TV series, students will be invited to question how popular culture objects influence personal and collective narratives in a post-modern world. 

Evaluation

 2 Written Tests: 70% (35x2) The first written test will focus on the theoretical framework(s) that define the concept of popular culture; the second how these concepts can aid the reading of objects of North American popular culture. Students will have to answer questions on materials in the research sets in the second written test.

 Class Participation: 15% There is quite a lot of reading associated with this CU. Therefore, the class participation grade will be attributed for class presence and discussion of core texts.

 Oral Presentation: 15% This is an 8-minute individual presentation where students present one aspect of the material in the research set from one or a combination of the perspectives studied including semiotics, social semiotics, popular culture & civilization, Afrofuturism or any other appropriate framework. The presentation must be supported by suitable visual aids.

 Students can and should select the research set according to interest. But as one class will be attributed to each of the five research sets, roughly the same number of students (10-12) will be attributed to each research set. Themes are attributed on a first come, first served basis, so please inform me of your choices as soon as possible. 

 Students do not need to produce a single presentation, but they do need to communicate with each other as a group to avoid repetition of themes. If a theme is repeated a single grade will be attributed and split (basically this will yield a negative mark). If however, 2 or 3 students want to pursue a more extended issue they can do this – but again each member of those mini-groups must speak for 8 minutes and the grades are individual.

 Grades will be attributed for the following criteria:

1)      Depth of knowledge of the subject matter and the theoretical framework

2)      Clarity of presentation & fluency of delivery. As many of you will be presenting in a non-native language, grammatical accuracy will not be a major issue, but communication of content – sharp, dynamic style with visual aids that support your arguments – and diction & pronunciation – so use words you can pronoun easily – and are vitally important. 

While the CU will be taught in English, and therefore the oral presentation should also be made in English, all written evaluations may be presented in English or Portuguese 

Research Set 1: Class structure & representations of the American Dream and its flaws: The Great Gatsby (novel F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1925; film, dir. Jack Clayton, script Francis Ford Coppola, 1974; film, dir. & script Baz Luhrmann, 2013). 

Research Set 2: Construction and deconstructing an American ideal? To Kill a Mocking Bird (novel Harper Lee,1960; film Robert Mulligan 1962) and Go Set a Watchman (novel Harper Lee, 2015).

 Research Set 3: Not really an American Dream The Grapes of Wrath (film Tom Ford, 1940); Hillbilly Elegy (novel J.D. Vance, 2016; film Ron Howard 2020) with the country music of Hank Willians & Johnny Cash & the protest music of Woody Guthrie and Bruce Springfield.

 Research Set 4: Superheroes and the development of the American graphic novel from The Yellow Kid (Richard Felton Outcault, 1896) to Batman, The Dark Knight Returns (Frank Miller, 1986) and Maus, A Survivor’s Tale (Art Spiegelman, 1986).

 Research Set 5: Afrofuturism and the writing and (re)writing African American representations in the USA from Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain, 1884) to The Birth of a Nation (G.W. Griffith, 2015); from the Harlem Renaissance to Stan Lee’s introduction of black superheroes (including T'Challa/the Black Panter) in Marvel Comics in the 1960s to the movie Black Panther (Ryan Coolger, 2018) and even Lemonade (Beyoncé, 2016).

 Bibliography Bigsby, Christopher (ed.) The Cambridge Companion to Modern American Culture. CUP. 2007.

Isenberg, Nancy White Trash. Atlantic Books. 2017.

Maasik, Sonia, and Jack Solomon (eds.) Signs of Life in the USA: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers, Ninth Edition. Bedford/St. Martin’s. 2018. 

Miller, Toby (ed). The Routledge Companion to Global Popular Culture. Routledge. 2015.

Storey, John. Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction 8th Ed. Routledge. 2018.