Fall 2026 Graduate Courses

Core Courses

These classes serve as a core curriculum for Cinema Studies MA and PhD students only.

Film Form / Film Sense

Nathaniel Brennan
Mondays, 6:00-10:00pm
Room 648
CINE-GT 1010 / Class # 13677
4 points

This core course introduces the methods and areas of study in the Cinema Studies MA program. In keeping with the department's evolving profile, we'll also learn about research idioms that blend theory and practice, such as documentary, data visualization, and curation. The course is divided into modules that reflect this range of possibilities. Assignments comprise both written and practical projects and will involve some group/collaborative work.

This course is open only to first year Cinema Studies graduate students.

Film History / Historiography

Instructor TBA
Thursdays, 6:00-10:00pm
Room 648
CINE-GT 1015 / Class # 13678
4 points

This course examines the ways in which the history of film has been conceptualized, written, documented, researched, and revised. Readings include theoretical considerations of historiography, methodological approaches, practical guides to conducting research, and a variety of essays from the field of cinema and media history and related disciplines. We analyze social, cultural, aesthetic, economic, ideological, and technological histories of cinema. How do we frame questions about film and the historical past that are significant, answerable, and logically sound? What evidence might help answer these questions? How should we write historical analyses that answer questions posed?

We will not survey the entire history of cinema. In roughly chronological sequence, we will consider particular aspects of that history: “early cinema,” “classical Hollywood cinema,” social history and exhibition, nonfiction and nontheatrical traditions, and the digital-era, web-based media that cause us to reconsider what cinema is and was. This eclectic approach is indicative of the recent forms that film history has taken: de-centering Hollywood and feature films, rediscovering neglected archives, seeking “lost” works, moving past film specificity to historicize all moving images and sounds as a form of media archaeology.

Indeed, the historiography of film is always changing and therefore always new. Events and conditions of the historical past are not changeable, but our understanding of them necessarily changes. Rediscoveries (literal and figurative) of films occur regularly. Indeed, recent film histories include much work about formerly neglected or suppressed aspects of cinema and media production, distribution, exhibition, and reception. In this way new film histories are often inspired by surprising rediscoveries.

This course is open only to Cinema Studies graduate students.

PhD Research Methodologies

Anna McCarthy
Fridays, 8:00am-12:00pm
Room 635
CINE-GT 2601 / Class # 13692
4 points

This course examines a range of activities entailed in being in the Cinema Studies doctoral program and preparing for a career in cinema and media studies. Most class meetings will include a guest speaker, as most of the full-time faculty in the Department of Cinema Studies will discuss their own research methodologies and careers. The class will also read two recent influential books in the field.  The professional activities to be examined include things such as participating in professional organizations, answering a call for papers, giving a conference presentation, “dissertating,” book reviewing, teaching, and publishing one’s research. We will consider the process of choosing a research focus for a scholarly project and tackling its research problems. We will study protocols followed for research in specific locations, and also consider techniques of conducting and organizing research, with emphasis on database research and use of NYU Libraries resources. Among the practical exercises that may be assigned are: evaluating journals, presses, and websites associated with cinema and media studies; reporting on libraries, archives, and research resources; attending professional talks and special events; delivering a short scholarly talk; and/or composing a book review, a report or blog entry on a cinema studies or other event you attend or a paper based on the talk or a research portfolio.

This course is open only to first year Cinema Studies PhD students.

Advanced Seminars

Neo Noir

Chris Straayer
Wednesdays, 12:30-4:30pm
Remote on Zoom
CINE-GT 1312 / Class # 13683
4 points

“Neo Noir” explores the multiple ways that films made beyond the classic period reference, appropriate, extend, pay homage to, and even define that amorphous category called “film noir”:  from nostalgia to escalation; from remakes to meta discourse that retroactively constructs a “genre;” from genre hybridization to the dispersion of disconnected noir elements (crime, paranoia, voice-over subjective flashback, existentialism); from realist-expressionist black and white to blatantly stylized color; from dark solitude to hyperreal violence; from national to international. To support our study of neo noir, we will simultaneously reference classic film noir from the 1940-50s and its scholarship, considering visual aesthetics, historical/cultural resonances, international/interdisciplinary influences, and philosophical/psychological references. However, rather than attempting to rein in Neo Noir, insisting on fidelity to film noir, the course celebrates Neo Noir’s exponential extrapolations. A tentative list of films includes Taxi Driver, The Man Who Wasn’t There, The Grifters, Memento, and Usual Suspects.

Weekly classes will be structured with two components: the first component, consisting of lectures, discussions, presentations, etc., will be synchronous, and the second component, consisting of screenings, project working groups, etc. will be asynchronous.

Permission code required. Request a permission code here.

Mother: Labor, Narrative, Politics

Toby Lee
Wednesdays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 635
CINE-GT 3025 / Class # 21400
4 points

No matter what our relation to our mother figure(s) may be, it is always a tangled one, a murky matrix of projections, attachments, disavowals, and blind spots. With each new generation, this figure returns as a question, posed on levels both individual and collective, about the formation of self and subject, the limitations and possibilities of gender, and the politics of reproduction. Taking a non-essentialist view of the maternal, this course explores the narratives and social structures that have shaped our understanding of motherhood — and of our mothers — in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, with particular attention to the political economy of reproductive labor and the intersections of motherhood with class, race, gender, sexuality, migration, medical science, and technology. We engage closely with texts from across a range of registers, including the scholarly, literary, and cinematic. Readings draw from film and media studies, feminist and queer theory, autotheory, anthropology, and psychoanalysis, as well as poetry, novels, and memoirs, brought into conversation with a variety of moving image work including fiction, non-fiction, and experimental film and video; installation; social and vernacular media.

Permission code required to register. Please contact the course instructor (tobylee@nyu.edu) by April 24 with your department/degree program and reasons for your interest in the course.

Permission code required. Request a permission code here.

Lectures

Global Cinema

Laura Harris
Wednesdays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 674
CINE-GT 1981
Cinema Studies majors: Section 001 / Class # 21796
Non-Cinema Studies majors: Section 002 / Class # 21797
4 points

What is global cinema? What does the term global describe? We will consider the history of thinking in global terms, focusing in part on post-enlightenment, racial capitalist, colonial principles and Liberal principles for dividing the earth, sea and sky into sovereign territories and for ordering the relations between them. We will consider, for example, what Schmitt refers to as global linear thinking, what Brady describes as the nested hierarchies of the scalar imaginary, Bentham’s internationalism, Kant’s cosmopolitanism, Hegel’s philosophy of world history, and the logics of the cold war, neoliberalism, and globalism. We will watch films that represent the brutality of the imposition and maintenance of these terms of order and the ways people—included or excluded—have maneuvered and survived them. We will also watch films that, without disavowing that history and the difference(s) it has made, suggest other ways live.

Among the films we may consider are: Song of Ceylon (Basil Wright); Isle of Flowers (Jorge Furtado); The West Indies (Med Hondo); Towards the Colonies (Miryam Charles); Atlantics (Mati Diop); Bontoc Eulogy (Marlon Fuentes); Geographies of Kinship (Deann Borshay Liem); Far from Vietnam and Here and Elsewhere (Jean-Luc Godard); Communists Like Us (The Otolith Group); Land and Freedom (Ken Loach); Enter the Dragon (Bruce Lee); From Gulf to Gulf (CAMP); Sleep Dealer (Alex Rivera); No Bears (Jafar Panahi); No Data Plan (Miko Reveza); Reservation Blues (Sky Hopinka); Measures of Distance (Mona Hatoum); Safe Journey (Tony Gatlif); In Vitro (Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind); The Human Surge (Eduardo Williams); Life on the CAPS, Parts 1 & 2 (Miriem Bennani); 4 Waters/Deep Implicancy (Denise Ferreira da Silva and Arjuna Neuman).

Adaptation

Robert Stam
Fridays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 670
CINE-GT 2057
Cinema Studies majors: Section 001 / Class # 21870
Non-Cinema Studies majors: Section 002 / Class # 21872
4 points

This course, which should be of interest to students concerned with literature, film, popular culture, and artistic adaptation in general, will explore artistic and interpretative remix practices and adaptations.  The course concerns the theory and practices of adaptation – cinematic, musical, and mediatic. This seminar is itself a remix in that it combines three courses that I have taught previously: “Novel and Film,” “Everything’s a Remix,” and "Bakhtin, Film, and Media.” The courses have in common the fact that they deal with adaptations and/or intertextuality while drawing on various media, literature, adaptations, music videos, parodies and the like. A very high proportion of films made around the world have been adaptations of pre-existing works, whether plays, novels, comic books, biographies, internet games, or some other source “text.” Internet-enabled adaptations simply take adaptation to another level by vastly expanding the combinatory possibilities. While Adaptation Studies long concentrated on filmic adaptations of novels, with adaptations of plays as a minor subfield, now theorists tend to see adaptation and remix as ubiquitous in contemporary culture. And while Adaptation Studies until the 1990s saw filmic adaptations through the grid of “fidelity,” the field has moved on to speak instead of intertextuality, transtextuality, transmediality and textual. technological,  industrial, social, and mediatic “convergence.” (Jenkins) A subtheme will have to do with adaptations of songs, from written poems, to sung poems, to music videos and so forth. The course will also talk about the different streams, such as surrealism, Brazilian anthropophagy, situationism, FutARism, that feed into the large ocean of mediatic adaptation and remix.

These issues are both very ancient and extremely contemporary. Before “remix” was called “remix,” it went by many other names, such as: influence, “tradition and the individual talent,” parody, pastiche, burlesque, adaptation, dialogism, the carnivalesque, collage, detournement, refunctioning, intertextuality, intermediality, and so forth. While “remix” is a recent term that evokes internet culture and especially recorded music, its roots go back to the more general phenomenon of adaptation in the arts. The course will look at adaptations of literary classics – for example, Robinson Crusoe, Tristram Shandy, Pride and Prejudice, and Macunaima. Close analyses of passages from the literary source-texts and the film sequences based on them will demonstrate the ways that a transtextual approach can illuminate both literature and film and the practice of adaptation across media. The emphasis will be on the myriad yet very distinct kinds of choices that go both into literary writing and into filmic adaptation, so as to attune students to the workings of the creative process in the arts in general.  At the same time we will look at the vast progeny of these novels as their stories and styles migrate from medium to medium. After gaining a sense of the novels’ narrative and style through close readings of passages from the texts, we will look at the process by which the novels are remediated as films, cartoons, music videos, parodies, TV series, web series, mashups, stand-up sketches, recut trailers and the like, many with only a tenuous link to literary texts. In sum, the course will explore the many dimensions of the theory and practice of remix: philosophy as remix; speech genres as remix, culture as remix, avant-garde movements such as surrealism and situationism as remix, participatory culture as remix, docu-fictions as remix, and garbage aesthetics as remix. The course will be especially concerned with irreverent adaptations and critical “remediations” (Bolter and Grusin) of famous literary texts, i.e. adaptations that update, criticize, remediate, and otherwise alter their source texts.  Since all the media arts adapt, change, rethink, transform, and remediate pre-existing texts and arts and genres, transtextual cultural theory provides an invaluable instrument of analysis and enables an in-depth understanding of very diverse objects of study -- plays, novels, films, performance, music videos, internet mash-ups and so forth.

Students are encouraged to pursue their personal interests and passions in more depth, whether it be remix as adaptation, parody, as political statement, as cultural assertion and so forth, as a gateway to their final term project. On at least two occasions – during the 6th week and the final 14th week -- students will present their own work – making connections between the assigned readings, the lectures, the features, and the clips. During the 6th week, the students will do brief analyses of a short clip relevant to their concerns and to those of the course, and using the analytical concepts developed in the course. Around the 10th week, there should be e-mail exchanges and consultation with the professor about proposed topics. Students will write a short written –a few sentences -- presentation of their project, explaining the Corpus, the Grid, and the Angle. The final week will be dedicated to longer oral analyses and presentations of your project.  

American Cinema: Origins to 1960

Dan Streible
Tuesdays, 6:00-10:00pm
Room 648
CINE-GT 2123
Cinema Studies majors: Section 001 / Class # 15393
Non-Cinema Studies majors: Section 002 / Class # 15394
4 points

This survey of cinema in the United States up to 1960 examines its predominant commercial form (narrative fiction, including classical Hollywood movies) alongside nonfiction, experimental, and nontheatrical films. “Hollywood” is only part of “American cinema.” The course looks at films themselves -- how do their styles and narratives change over time? -- but also at contexts: how do films document and alter their times? How did the U.S. film industry develop and change? how did the business of movies use stars, genres, publicity, theaters? What role did technologies play? What other institutions and forces impacted American cinema before 1960? We also attend to key figures in this history: the makers (directors, writers, producers, performers, technicians) and shapers of discourse (critics, authors, fans, censors, scholars, politicos, the press, government, et al.), as well as moviegoers. The goal is to understand this consequential and popular modern medium and its contributions to the art and culture of what came to be called modernity.

All students attend the 14 weekly lecture and screening session (4 hours). Graduate students will do the assigned undergraduate readings as well as additional advanced readings. Final course grades are determined by attendance, participation, and four written assignments. The writing assignments for graduate students will be distinctive from the undergraduate requirements, involving original historical research.

Twilight Zones

Michael Gillespie
Thursdays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 674
CINE-GT 3014
Cinema Studies majors: Section 001 / Class # 21877
Non-Cinema Studies majors: Section 002 / Class # 21878
4 points

Using the uncanny, absurd, and surreal nature of Rod Serling’s envisioning of The Twilight Zone (1959-1964) as a model, this course focuses on a selection of films and television shows that operate in a comparable mode. In particular, the course examines how the social critique provided by The Twilight Zone’s speculative ruminations across innumerable genres operates in the context of the art of blackness. The course objects will include FuturestatesThe Vince Staples ShowRandom Acts of FlynessCosmic SlopAtlanta, the work of Jordan Peele and Boots Riley, and many other films and television shows.

Sinophone Documentaries

Zhen Zhang
Day Mondays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 674
CINE-GT 3105
Cinema Studies majors: Section 001 / Class # 21795
Non-Cinema Studies majors: Section 002 / Class # 21920
4 points

The new Chinese documentary as an independent film practice emerged around 1989.  Prior to that, documentary film in China was exclusively produced and distributed within a state-controlled media system. Paralleling and bearing witness to decades of rapid and large-scale economic and social transformations in post-Mao China, the new documentary has also transformed itself into a multifaceted, now increasingly fragmented social movement involving filmmakers, critics, curators, and publics on a variety of platforms including the internet, and has caught the attention of both domestic and international film and arts festivals. An integral aspect of the course will inquire into issues of technology, distribution, exhibition, and reception.

The seminar has two interconnected components: 1) Tracing multiple historical genealogies of the movement while exploring conceptual frameworks for understanding the dynamic relationships between aesthetic experimentations, socio-political exigencies and ethical responsibilities in the Chinese independent documentary; 2) Placing the evolving phenomenon in the PRC within a broader Sinophone and fluctuating regional geo-political context, the course brings in parallels or alternative developments in Taiwan, Hong Kong and beyond, analyzing their connections and divergences. A crucial component of the course requires active participation in the 12th Reel China Biennial (October 30-November 1, 2026). 

First year MA students should email the instructor (zz6@nyu.edu) with a short statement of rationale and obtain permission before registration.

Theory/Practice Courses

Film Criticism

Stephanie Zacharek
Wednesdays, 6:00-10:00pm
Room 674
CINE-GT 1141 / Class # 13682
4 points

This course will examine the history and practice of film criticism as a means of helping students to sharpen their own critical thinking and writing. We'll focus on the finer points of film scholarship and film criticism, and discuss the benefits and drawbacks of theory as applied in criticism. We'll also examine the role of criticism in the age of the internet, and the specific demands of covering the festival circuit. Students will explore the practicalities and challenges of writing about film across all genres—including mainstream comedies and action films, art cinema and avant-garde film, political films and documentaries—and we’ll discuss modes of critical practice useful in addressing those films. Course readings will include essays by Pauline Kael, Manny Farber, André Bazin, Molly Haskell, Andrew Sarris, James Agee, and others. Students will be expected to write an essay of 800 to 1000 words each week evaluating films screened in class or playing in the New York City area.

This course is open to Cinema Studies MA students only.

The Scriptwriter's Craft: The Biopic

Josslyn Luckett
Tuesdays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 652
CINE-GT 1500 / Class # TBA
4 points

MGM screenwriter Dorothy Farnum once described script writers as "stokers of a ship, necessary but condemned to the hold of obscurity...we do work so the stars and directors will have a nice time on deck." This course is designed to dwell in the hold by centering the work of the writer and closely analyzing and comparing the techniques employed by Hollywood, independent, and international screenwriters. This semester we will devote our study to the crafting of the BIOPIC by engaging traditional works and those that subvert the genre. Music, politics, art world icons, when does this genre get it right and when does it fail miserably? What is the place for (Auto)Biopics like All that Jazz (Bob Fosse) or Pain and Glory (Pedro Almodovar), and how willing are we to dwell in poetic meditations such as Ballad of Suzanne Cesaire (Madeleine Hunt Ehrlich) or I'm Not There (Todd Haynes)?  Finally in several cases we will compare these biopics to the award winning documentaries from which they "borrow" heavily.

This course is open to Cinema Studies MA students only.

Independent Study & Internship

Cinema Studies majors only. Permission code required after completing the required paperwork. Cinema Studies MA students may register for a maximum of 8 points of Independent Study/Internship during their academic career.

Independent Study

CINE-GT 2900 / class # 13693
1-4 points variable

A student wishing to conduct independent research for credit must obtain approval from a full-time faculty member in the Department of Cinema Studies who will supervise an independent study for up to 4 credits. This semester-long study is a project of special interest to the student who, with the supervising faculty member, agrees on a course of study and requirements.  The proposed topic for an Independent Study project should not duplicate topics taught in departmental courses.  This is an opportunity to develop or work on a thesis project.

To register, you must submit an Independent Study Form. Once the information from your form is verified by your faculty supervisor, you will receive a permission code.

Internship

CINE-GT 2950 / class # 13703
1-4 points variable

A student wishing to pursue an internship must obtain the internship and submit the Learning Contract before receiving a permission code. Internship grades are pass/fail.

Directed Reading

CINE-GT 3907 / class # 13699
4 points

Please fill out the Directed Reading form, to be verified by your faculty advisor, in order to receive a permission code to register.

Moving Image Archiving & Preservation Courses

Introduction to Moving Image Archiving & Preservation

Instructor TBA
Mondays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 652
CINE-UT 1800-02 / Class # 13688
4 points

This course introduces all aspects of the field, contextualizes them, and shows how they fit together. It will discuss the media themselves (including the technology, history, and contextualization within culture, politics, and economics) Topics include: conservation and preservation principles, organization and access, daily practice with physical artifacts, restoration, curatorship and programming, legal issues and copyright, and new media issues. Students will learn the importance of other types of materials (manuscripts, correspondence, stills, posters, scripts, etc.). Theories of collecting and organizing (as well as their social meanings) will be introduced.

This course is open only to Cinema Studies MA and PhD students.

Copyright, Legal Issues & Policy

Gregory Cram
Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm
Room 670
CINE-GT 1804-002 / Class # 13701
4 points

With the advent of new technologies, film producers and distributors and managers of film and video collections are faced with a myriad of legal and ethical issues concerning the use of their works or the works found in various collections. The answers to legal questions are not always apparent and can be complex, particularly where different types of media are encompassed in one production. When the law remains unclear, a risk assessment, often fraught with ethical considerations, is required to determine whether a production can be reproduced, distributed or exhibited without infringing the rights of others. What are the various legal rights that may encumber moving image material? What are the complex layers of rights and who holds them?Does one have to clear before attempting to preserve or restore a work? How do these rights affect downstream exhibition and distribution of a preserved work? And finally, what steps can be taken in managing moving image collections so that decisions affecting copyrights can be taken consistently? This course will help students make intelligent decisions and develop appropriate policies for their institution.

Culture & Media Courses

Culture & Media I

Faye Ginsburg
Tuesdays, 5:00-8:00pm
25 Waverly Place, Room 107
CINE-GT 1402 / Class # 13686
4 points

This course offers a critical revision of the history of the genre of ethnographic film, the central debates it has engaged around cross-cultural representation, and the theoretical and cinematic responses to questions of the screen representation of culture, from the early romantic constructions of Robert Flaherty to current work in film, television, and video on the part of indigenous people throughout the world. Ethnographic film has a peculiar and highly contested status within anthropology, cinema studies, and documentary practice. This seminar situates ethnographic film within the wider project of the representation of cultural lives, and especially of “natives.” Starting with what are regarded as the first examples of the genre, the course examines how these emerged in a particular intellectual context and political economy. It then considers the key works that have defined the genre, and the epistemological and formal innovations associated with them, addressing questions concerning social theory, documentary, as well as the institutional structures through which they are funded, distributed, and seen by various audiences. Throughout, the course keeps in mind the properties of film as a signifying practice, its status as a form of anthropological knowledge, and the ethical and political concerns raised by cross-cultural representation.

Video Production I

Ethiraj Gabriel Dattatreyan & Cheryl Furjanic
Tuesdays, 10:00am-12:30pm
25 Waverly Place, Room 612
CINE-GT 1995 / class # 13691
4 points

Yearlong seminar in ethnographic documentary video production using state-of-the-art digital equipment for students in the Program in Culture and Media. The first portion of the course is dedicated to instruction, exercises, and reading familiarizing students with fundamentals of video production and their application to a broad conception of ethnographic and documentary storytelling approaches. Assignments undertaken in the fall raise representational, methodological, and ethical issues in approaching and working through an ethnographic documentary project. Students develop a topic and field site for their project early in the fall term, learn to write and pitch their documentary proposals and treatments, begin their shooting, and complete a short, 5 minute video preview/trailer by the end of the semester. This work should demonstrate competence in shooting and editing using digital camera/audio and Adobe Premiere Pro nonlinear editing systems. Students devote the spring semester to intensive work on the project, continuing to shoot and edit, presenting work to the class, and completing their (approximately 20-minute) ethnographic documentaries. Student work is presented and critiqued during class sessions, and attendance and participation in group critiques and lab sessions is mandatory. Students should come into the class with project ideas already well-developed. In addition to class time, there are regular technical lab sessions on the use of equipment. Students who have not completed the work assigned in the first semester are not allowed to register for the second semester. There is no lab fee, but students are expected to provide additional memory cards as needed, and their own external hard drives for backing up their project.

For approved Culture & Media students in their second year only. Prerequisites include completion of Culture & Media I and Sight & Sound: Documentary. 

Permission code required. Request a permission code here.

 

Maintenance of Matriculation

M.A.
MAINT-GA 4747-002
Class # TBA

Ph.D.
MAINT-GA 4747-003
Class # TBA

Updated March 27, 2026