Universitat Internacional de Catalunya

Audiovisual Trends

Audiovisual Trends
4
12029
3
Second semester
OB
Main language of instruction: Spanish

Teaching staff

Introduction

From an artistic and multidisciplinary perspective, this course promotes reflection on contemporary audiovisual narrative and expression.

Pre-course requirements

There are no prerequisites.

Objectives

Designed for students in the fiction and non-fiction tracks of the 3rd year of the Audiovisual Communication Bachelor's Degree, "Audiovisual Trends" builds upon the specific knowledge of each specialization to establish new artistic meeting points that enhance students' critical thinking and provide them with theoretical tools for the development and analysis of various types of audiovisual projects.

Competences/Learning outcomes of the degree programme

  • 01 - The ability to adapt to varying circumstances
  • 02 - The ability to understand, accept criticism and correct errors
  • 03 - The ability to administer and manage human and technical resources
  • 04 - The ability to work in a team and autonomously
  • 05 - The ability to organise time and workspace
  • 06 - The ability to develop academic rigour, responsibility, ethics and professionalism
  • 07 - The ability to apply the deontology and respect for the audiovisual sector
  • 08 - The ability of critical analysis, synthesis, concretion and abstraction
  • 09 - The ability to objectify, quantify and interpret (data, statistics, empirical evidence…)
  • 10 - The ability to confront difficulties and resolve problems
  • 11 - The ability to generate debate and reflection
  • 12 - The ability to meet deadlines, develop the ability to be punctual and respect for human, technical and material resources
  • 13 - The ability to create spoken and written communication
  • 14 - Knowledge and mastery of rhetoric and oratory to communicate own ideas
  • 15 - Knowledge and mastery of body language and techniques for public speaking
  • 16 - The ability to manage, analysis and reflect on content
  • 18 - The capacity and development of general culture and interest in social events
  • 19 - The ability of informative documentation
  • 20 - Knowledge and mastery of bibliographic media
  • 21 - Knowledge and mastery of the digital culture
  • 22 - Knowledge and mastery of the distinction between opinion and information / colloquial and cultured register
  • 23 - The ability to prioritize newsworthy events and contrast information
  • 24 - The ability to plan and organize both short term and long term projects
  • 25 - The ability to maximize creative development
  • 26 - The ability to develop a sense of taste and perfection in the aesthetics and finalization of projects
  • 27 - The ability to adapt to distinct audio visual publics and markets.
  • 34 - The ability to know and respect the different roles of the artistic and technical teams
  • 35 - The ability to contextualize and critically analyze the products of the audiovisual industry
  • 37 - The ability to contextualize and critically analyze the organizational structure of global communication
  • 41 - The ability to know how the distinct elemental agencies of the audio visual sector function
  • 42 - The ability to distinguish, analyze and dominate the distinct genres and formats of television, film and radio
  • 43 - the ability to create scripts for film, television and radio according to the demands of the genre
  • 44 - The ability to adapt to new audiovisual formats
  • 45 - The ability to know and dominate the techniques of audiovisual narrative.
  • 50 - The ability to adapt, understand and apply the expressive possibilities of new technologies and future changes
  • 53 - Lingustic ability in Catalan, Spanish and English
  • 54 - The ability to skillfully manage the literature, terminology and linguistic structures of the English language related to the field of communication.

Learning outcomes of the subject

Adopting new analytical criteria.

Increasing reflective and critical capacity.

Discovering new theoretical and artistic references.

Syllabus

1 (taught by Lourdes Domingo)

  1. VIDEO ART. From Nam June Paik to Bill Viola. Video art spans art, cinema, museum, and becomes mediation.

  2. FASHION. The fashion film. Directors, actors, and brands. Events: space as a spectacle. The evanescence of the market: short videos, AI, and new formats.

  3. DRAMATIC MECHANISMS IN THE AGE OF IMAGE-EXCESS. Fracture and fragmentation in a globalizing discourse: space and time.

  4. OMNIPRESENT AND FUNCTIONAL IMAGE. Using and creating, participating and being absorbed. Creating meaning or immanence of experience on the social screen.

  5. PHANTOM FIGURATION IN LIQUID SOCIETY. Figurative consistency in film, series, and advertising.

2 (taught by Andreu Arribas)

Being critical:

The aim of this second part of the course is to propose a journey through some theoretical and methodological lines that students can use to historicize and interpret contemporary audiovisual trends. To this end, tools are provided to facilitate students adopting new criteria for study and analysis to apply to their final work.

The course will start from Nietzsche's concept of "critical history" and its practical application to christology, art history, and the image before finally applying it in depth to cinema; specifically, to a decade, a genre, and a specific historiography.

Topic 1

The philosophy of history for the historicization of audiovisual trends

Nietzsche's concept of "critical history": the historical (monumental history and antiquarian history); the ahistorical and supra-historical (critical history). The application of Nietzsche's "critical history" to christology by Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI: interpretation includes the historical component and the relationship of the past to the present. The application of Nietzsche's "critical history" to art history by Georges Didi-Huberman: Panofsky reads Kant (the document), Didi-Huberman reads Freud (the symptom); the reconfiguration of the past in the image (anachronism).

Viewing excerpts from American Sniper (Clint Eastwood, 2014), The Deer Hunter (Michael Cimino, 1978), Fort Apache (John Ford, 1948), and They Died with Their Boots On (Raoul Walsh, 1941) and interpreting each of them from the others' perspectives.

Topic 2

Visual motifs as a critical tool for reading cinema

Visual memory. Forms of argument. Viewer recognition. Scenes with temporality. Before the tomb: exploring Ford's cinema from the motif of the tomb (from She Wore a Yellow Ribbon [1949] to The Searchers [1956] via Straight Shooting [1917], Judge Priest [1934], and Young Mr. Lincoln [1939]) via Sophocles (Oedipus at Colonus), the Christian pictorial tradition of Noli me tangere, Novalis and eighteenth-century romantic literature, Hitchcock (Vertigo, 1958), Mankiewicz (The Barefoot Contessa, 1954), Leone (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, 1966), Eastwood (Unforgiven, 1992), and Tarantino (Kill Bill Vol. 2, 2004).

Topic 3

From the crisis of image-action to image-energy: the critical rereading of 1970s American cinema by Jean-Baptiste Thoret

Deleuze's image-movement. Two theses of Bergson's movement. The image-perception, the image-affect, and the image-action. The crisis of image-action. Jean-Baptiste Thoret's image-energy in his critical rereading of 1970s American cinema: shaving of classical cinema and aesthetic, historical, and political necessity to show violence. Viewing excerpts from The Big Shave (Scorsese, 1967), Bonnie and Clyde (Penn, 1967), The Graduate (Nichols, 1967), The Wild Bunch (Peckinpah, 1969), Woodstock (Wadleigh, 1970), Two-Lane Blacktop (Monte Hellman, 1971), Mean Streets (Scorsese, 1973), Taxi Driver (Scorsese, 1976), The Deer Hunter (Cimino, 1978), and We Blew It (Thoret, 2017).

Topic 4

The tragic hero, the philosophy of limits, and the survival of the image in the critical rereading of the western by Fran Benavente

The application of Nietzsche's "critical history" to a film genre. Cinematic lineage vs modernity (Histoire(s) du cinéma). Legacy transmission (Deadwood). The returning body (Once Upon a Time in the West, Kill Bill Vol. I and II). The tragic hero (Shane, My Darling Clementine). Explosiveness, temporality, and shrouding of the genre (The Wild Bunch; For a Few Dollars More; The Shooting, Ride the Whirlwind). The hero's recovery from the grave (Unforgiven, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Pale Rider). The ashes of the genre (Dead Man).

Topic 5

The myth of the wounded American subject

The application of Nietzsche's "critical history" to the history of American cinema. Acknowledgment of a wound (The Searchers). Fractured myths (A History of Violence). The solicitation of the mnemonic image (True Detective III, Zero Dark Thirty, Paris, Texas). Genealogy of the wound (The Last of the Mohicans, The Birth of a Nation, Gone with the Wind, They Died With Their Boots on, Fort Apache, Heaven’s Gate, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford). Confrontation with horror as division (The Searchers, The Deer Hunter, Heat, True Detective). Contemporary fractures (Sicario, Wind River). Acknowledgment of the wound's non-closure (Mississippi Burning, BlacKkKlansman) or proposal of closure (Major Dundee, News of the World).

Teaching and learning activities

In person



TRAINING ACTIVITYECTS CREDITS
Lectures. In lectures, lecturers/professors not only transmit content or knowledge, but also, and above all else, attitudes, motivation, skills and values, etc. They also ensure that participants can express their opinions and arguments to the other students.
1.5
Focused Praxis. Handing in occasional exercises to learn theory through practice.
0.5
Coaching. Monitoring how students learn the content of the subject, either individually or in groups. In the coaching sessions, mistakes will be corrected, queries answered, and exercises and activities to achieve the established objectives will be suggested.
0.5
Seminar. This activity will consist of taking an in-depth look at specific up-to-date topics in a monographic manner-in some cases these topics will have been debated socially-, via active work in small groups.
1.5

Evaluation systems and criteria

In person



In all assignments, the university's spelling and anti-plagiarism regulations are applied.

To pass, it is necessary to have obtained a minimum of 5 in the practice block and another minimum of 5 in the video essay.

25% - Practices

Textual analysis: individual (10%)

Search for and analyze a reality connected with the sound revolution: individual (7.5%)

Micro-practices of participation in class: 7.5%

15% -  Prácticas

Essay proposal (7.5%)

Essay development (7.5%)

60% - Videoensayo

 

Text (30%)

Video (30%)

In the second retake and subsequent ones, the evaluation will consist of an exam.

Regarding continuous or single evaluation, in third and subsequent retakes, there are two options:

  • The student who attended 80% or more of the classes can choose single evaluation. Then, they will have to take the exam on the date decided by the university.

  • The student who did NOT attend 80% or more of the classes has to attend and carry out continuous evaluation.

Bibliography and resources

Balló, Jordi. Imágenes del silencio. Los motivos visuales en el cine. Barcelona: Anagrama, 1995.

Balló, Jordi y BERGALA, Alain (eds). Motivos visuales del cine. Barcelona: Galaxia Gutenberg, 2016.

Benavente, Fran. El héroe trágico en el western: el género y sus límites. Sevilla: Athenaica Ediciones, 2017.

Deleuze, Gilles. La imagen-movimiento. Estudios sobre cine 1. Barcelona: Paidós, 1986.

DIDI-HUBERMAN, Georges. «Pregunta formulada». En: Ante la imagen. Pregunta formulada a los fines de la historia del arte. Murcia: Cendeac, 2010, pp. 11-19.

DIDI-HUBERMAN, Georges. «Apertura: La historia del arte como disciplina anacrónica». En: Ante el tiempo. Historia del arte y anacronismo de las imágenes. Buenos Aires: Adriana Hidalgo, 2011, pp. 29-97.  Elena, A. (1999). Los cines Periféricos. Paidós: Barcelona.

Elsaesser, T. (2006) “Early Film History and Multi-Media. An Archaeology of Possible Futures?” en Hui Kyong, W & Keenan T. (Eds.) New Media Old Media., Routledge: Nueva York.

Foucault, Michel. «Nietzsche, Freud, Marx». En: Nietzsche, Freud, Marx. Barcelona: Anagrama, 1981, pp. 27-50.


Guerra, C., Steyerl, H., Fernandes, J. (2015). Hito Steyerl. Duty-free art. Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía.

Jameson, F. (1995). La estética geopolítica: cine y espacio en el sistema mundial. Paidós: Barcelona.

Jullier, L. (2004). La imagen digital. De la tecnología a la estética. La Marca: Buenos Aires.

Kuspit, D. (2006). Arte digital y videoarte. Transgrediendo los límites de la representación. Círculo de Bellas Artes: Madrid.

Lipovetsky, G., Serroy, J. (2009). La pantalla global. Cultura mediática y cine en la era hipermoderna. Anagrama: Barcelona. Col. Argumentos

Meigh-Andrews, C. (2006). A History of Video Art. The Development of Form and Function. Berg: Oxford and New York.

Nietzsche, Friedrich. Sobre la utilidad y el perjuicio de la historia para la vida (Intempestiva II). Madrid: Biblioteca Nueva, 1999.

Oudart, Jean-Pierre. «La sutura». En: Banda aparte, nº 6, 1997, pp. 51-63.

Pinto Veas, I. (2010). La imagen simulacro, laFuga, 11. 

Quintana, A. (2011). Después del cine. Imagen y realidad en la era digital. Acantilado: Barcelona.

Ratzinger, Joseph/Benedicto XVI. La infancia de Jesús. Barcelona: Planeta, 2012.

Rosenbaum, J. y Martin, A. (2011). Mutaciones del cine contemporáneo. Errata Naturae: Madrid.

Russo, E. (2009). “Lo viejo y lo nuevo, ¿qué es del cine en la era del post-cine?” en Jorge La Ferla (comp.), Artes y medios audiovisuales: Un estado de situación II. Las prácticas mediáticas pre digitales y post analógicas, Buenos Aires, Aurelia Rivera, Nueva Librería, 2008.

Sánchez, S. (2013). Hacia una imagen no-tiempo. Deleuze y el cine contemporáneo. Ediciones de la Universidad de Oviedo: Oviedo. 

Sedeño Valdellós, A. (2011). Historia y estética del videoarte en España. Comunicación Social: Zamora.

Steyerl, H. (2014). Los condenados de la pantalla. Caja Negra: Buenos Aires. Col. Futuros próximos.

Stoichita, V. (2006). Simulacros. El efecto Pigmalion: de Ovidio a Hitchcock. Ed. Siruela: Madrid.

Thoret, Jean-Baptiste. Le cinéma américain des annés 70. París: Cahiers du cinéma, 2009.

Weinrichter, A. (ed.) (2007). La forma que piensa. Tentativas en torno al cine-ensayo. Festival Punto de Vista: Navarra.