Fall 2014/Pasadena

TC530

Johnston

TC530: THEOLOGY AND FILM (4 Units: 160 Hours). Robert K. Johnston.


DESCRIPTION: This course will engage with a theology of culture by focusing on one particular aspect: theology and film. The course will (1) view, discuss, and analyze a multicultural and global selection of films, (2) provide the student methodological and critical perspectives for engaging culture, both from the humanities and the social sciences, (3) explore theological and biblical perspectives foundational to theology and film criticism, and (4) provide contextual approaches for Gospel articulation and invitation.

LEARNING OUTCOMES: Students will be able to (1) articulate the relationship between theories and practices for sympathetic engagement with culture as expressed in the media, (2) engage appreciatively and critically in film interpretation, (3) explore and construct possible theological and biblical approaches for engaging with our contemporary culture, (4) articulate something of the presence and purposes of God in human culture, and (5) describe approaches for Gospel demonstration, articulation and invitation through the use of film in their Christian witness and discipleship.

COURSE FORMAT: This class meets once per week for three-and-a-half hour sessions for a total of 35 hours of classroom instruction for lecture and discussion plus 5 hours of directed learning activities for a total of 40 instructional hours. Class will include discussion, small groups, and lecture. Films will usually be assigned for viewing prior to each class along with a range of critical reading. During each class, students will typically (1) discuss the movie(s), (2) consider aspects of the nature of film and/or theology and/or Gospel demonstration, (3) use selected critical and theological approaches to culture, (4) enter into theological criticism with the film, and (5) explore missional possibilities within this engagement. Occasional outside resource persons will be utilized.

REQUIRED VIEWING AND READING: 1,020 pp. of required reading and 15 films for required viewing.

Fifteen films: Decalogue I (Polish); Midnight in Paris; Stranger than Fiction (Swiss/American); Moulin Rouge (Australian);Tree of Life; Noah; American Beauty; Little Miss Sunshine;The Adjustment Bureau; Run Lola Run (German); The Princess and the Warrior (German); Okuribito/Departures (Japanese); Water (Indian); The Lunchbox (Indian); Magnolia.

The following texts:

Boorstin, Jon. Making Movies Work. Silman-James Press, 1995. ISBN: 978-1879505278, Pub. Price $19.95 [162 pp. assigned].

Ecclesiastes (multiple readings); portions of Job, 2 Samuel, Isaiah, 2 Chronicles.

Johnston, Robert. Reel Spirituality. 2nd ed. Baker, 2006. ISBN: 978-0801031878, Pub. Price $25.00 [277 pp. assigned].

________. Useless Beauty. Wipf & Stock, 2004. ISBN: 978-1610978293, Pub. Price $23.00 [110 pp. assigned].

Villarejo, Amy. Film Studies: The Basics. 2nd ed. Routledge, 2013. ISBN: 978-0415584968, Pub. Price $21.80 [172 pp.].

Class reader (approx. 300 total pages): critical essays and chapters by bell hooks, Catherine Barsotti, Kutter Callaway, Ellen Davis, Gordon Lynch, William Placher, Kathryn Tanner, and others.

ASSIGNMENTS AND ASSESSMENT:

  1. 1,020 pp. of required reading [58 hours].

  2. Viewing and journaling on assigned movies and class participation (10%) [30 hours, addressing L.O.’s 1,2,3] Note: this includes 6 hours of DLAs.

  3. Quiz on Boorstin, Making Movies Work (5%) [1 hour, addressing L.O 2].

  4. Quiz on Villarejo, Film Studies (5%) [1 hour, addressing L.O.’s 1,2].

  5. Critical response to Johnston, Reel Spirituality (10%) [2 hours, addressing L.O.’s 1,2,3].

  6. 2 or 3 page personal reflection paper on film’s spiritual power (10%) [3 hours, addressing L.O.s 4, 5].

  7. One four page report of a ministry project using a film from Finding God in the Movies that encourages Gospel demonstration, articulation and invitation - (20%) [10 hours preparing, facilitating, and writing, addressing L.O. 5].

  8. One ten page paper on a film (approved by the instructor) bringing the movie into dialogue with Ecclesiastes, using film theory and constructing a possible theological and biblical approach for engaging with our contemporary culture. - (40%) [20 hours preparing & writing, addressing L.O.s 2, 3, 4 and 5].

PREREQUISITES: None.

RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Option to meet the TH5 or C2 requirement in the 120 MDiv Program. Option to count in the Theology and Arts emphasis, Worship and Music Ministry emphasis, and Worship, Theology and the Arts emphasis.

FINAL EXAMINATION: None.


NOTE: This ECD is a reliable guide to the course design but is subject to modification. Textbook prices are set by publishers and are subject to change.

For your convenience, order these texts online through the Archives Bookshop.