Weekly Schedule:
Week 1, Tuesday 3 October:
Experimental Film from Maya Deren
Pre-film lecture and screening:
Meshes of the Afternoon (1943, 14 minutes) with Alexander Hammid; At Land (1944, 15 minutes);
A Study in Choreography for Camera (1945, 3 minutes); Ritual in Transfigured Time (1946, 14 minutes).
Post-film lecture/discussion
Erik Roraback will lead a discussion of selected texts in Essential Deren: Collected Writings on Film by Maya Deren, in Maya Deren: Incomplete Control by Sarah Keller and in Maya Deren and the American Avant-
Garde ed. by Bill Nichols.
Week 2, Tuesday 10 October:
The Early Sound Soviet Cinema and the Late-Style Quiet Eisenstein
Pre-film lecture and screening:
Portions of Ivan the Terrible, Part One (1945 Russian with English subtitles, 99 minutes); Ivan the Terrible, Part Two (1946, Russian with English subtitles, 85 minutes), dir. Sergei Eisenstein.
Post-film lecture/discussion
Readings: D. Cook: A History, pp. 302–03.
G. Lambert: “Cinema and the Outside” in The Brain is the Screen, pp. 253–92.
E. Roraback: “Dialectical Linkages and Circulations; or, the Moves and Capitals of Silence of
Eisenstein’s Ivan the Terrible, Parts I & II”.
Part of a book being prepared for publication.
Week 3, Date To Be Announced and Week 4, 24 October:
Orson Welles, American Film and the Advent of the Time-Image
Pre-film lecture and screening:
Citizen Kane (1941, 119 min., dir. Orson Welles).
Post-film lecture/discussion
Rdgs: D. Cook: A History, pp. 327–46.
G. Deleuze: Cinema 2, pp. 98–155.
E. Roraback: “A Spheric and Moving Cosmic Form: Cultural Capital and Orson Welles’s Citizen Kane (1941)”. Revised version of a lecture given at the University of Szeged (Hungary, 2003) and of an article subsequently published in Boston, USA in Parallax: A Journal of International Perspectives (2008), ed. David L. Robbins. As are all the pieces by E.R., it is now a subunit of a volume in preparation.
The Lost Nirvana and Orson Welles’s Lost Magnum Opus
Pre-film lecture and screening:
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942, 82 min., dir. Orson Welles).
Post-film lecture/discussion
Rdgs: D. Cook: A History, pp. 327–46.
G. Deleuze: Cinema 2, pp. 98–155.
E. Roraback: “Multisensorial Evocations & Provocations of Capital Lost: Orson Welles’s The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)”. Revised version of a guest lecture given at the Research