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Peter
Hawes's most recent piece for the Yale Alumni Magazine was
"The Persistence of Poetry,"
in the March 2000 issue.
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Lights! Camera! Yale!
Since
film studies was first offered on the campus 30 years ago, the discipline
has survived repeated challenges to its academic credibility. With
the arrival of some new (and tenured) talent, film may be poised
for an enduring surge.
April
2001
by Peter Hawes
Ever
since 1966, when a faculty member named Standish Lawder began teaching
a film survey course through the art history department,
Yale has made repeated attempts at bringing movies into the curriculum
on a scale appropriate to their role in the society at large. So
vigorous had the efforts become by 1968 that this magazine published
a special issue on the subject, and several attempts were made in
the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s -- when the number of film courses and
classes that used film to examine other disciplines was steadily
growing -- to create a first-rate film program. But the University
balked every time. According to those involved, the resistance stemmed
largely from a persistent belief that film didn't have the scholarly
tradition of other forms of expression -- especially literature
-- and therefore wasn't worthy of serious study.
But now, film has
suddenly gained a much firmer footing, and with it a chance to put New Haven
on the worldwide cinematic map. Viewing and editing equipment is being updated;
the student-run Yale Film Society is back after a long dormancy; and University
Pictures -- which produces and screens student films -- is enjoying an upswing
in membership. But the center of attention is clearly the Whitney Humanities
Center on Wall Street, where film studies has found a home and where Yale's
renewed commitment to the study of film is taking root.
It's difficult
to say exactly why, after so many years of ups and downs in film studies, this
is happening now. Student interest in film is clearly on the rise; applications
to the film major were up from 60 for the Class of 1994 to 104 for the Class
of 2000. But this interest is no stronger than it was in the 1970s. §
Administrators
say no single decision was made at the University level to build a top-flight
film studies program at Yale, but those most closely involved are enthusiastic
about its potential. "In five years Yale will be the place for the serious study
of film," says Michael Holquist, chairman of the comparative literature department,
which participates in the program. Holquist predicts that Yale will soon offer
its first graduate film degree program. "It's a great idea and high time," he
says.
At the heart of the
renewed vitality in film studies are a pair of new senior professorships
in American studies and comparative literature. Searches for candidates
to fill the new positions resulted last summer in the creation of
Yale's first-ever tenured film
professorships. Charles Musser '73, director of undergraduate studies
in film studies since 1992, was elevated from associate professor
to full professor in American studies and film studies. Meanwhile,
J. Dudley Andrew, a well-known film scholar, was recruited from
the University of Iowa as professor of comparative literature and
film studies. They were named co-chairs of film studies, and given
resources to update equipment, outfit classrooms, add faculty, and
purchase films.
"It's
been a triumph of struggle over indifference," says
Howard Lamar, an emeritus
professor of history and former President of the University. In
the 1980s, Lamar argued -- initially unsuccessfully -- to consolidate
Yale's dozen or so film courses (then loosely knit into a special
divisional major) into a coherent degree program. It was not until
Lamar's last meeting on his last day as dean of Yale College in
1985 that the faculty voted to establish film studies as a formal
interdisciplinary major, setting the stage for a 15-year rebuilding
process that culminated in the most recent developments.
Lamar and other long-time
film supporters say the program surely would have crumbled were it not for the
"faith" and relentlessness of Brigitte Peucker, a former film studies chair
who has taught film at Yale for 30 years, and, later, Musser. Their administrators
and colleagues say they never stopped fighting for the program's survival and
gave it the structure and coherence it needed to be taken seriously by the rest
of the University.
According to Musser,
the unprecedented granting of tenure to a film professor -- let alone to two
in one year -- represents a "sea change" that has given film studies long-sought
stability. "We've reached a critical mass in which the program no longer will
depend on only one or two key people," Musser says. "Now if someone leaves,
or retires, or moves, we won't be back to square-one every time."
Square-one is familiar
terrain for film studies at Yale.
Until this year,
there had never been more than one full professor with an appointment in the
subject. Many popular film teachers left Yale to establish programs at other
universities. Among them were Crafton, who went to Notre Dame; David Rodowick,
now at London's King's College; Annette Insdorf at Columbia; Jay Leyda at New
York University; and Angela Dalla Vacche at Emory. "We could have been ten years
ago where we are today -- at the cutting edge of film," says Peucker, who teaches
film courses while serving as chair of the German department.
With every significant
departure Yale's film program was forced to reinvent itself, and it often survived
as much on the wits and imagination of the people who ran it as on institutional
support. As chair of film studies in the early 1980s, Donald Crafton learned
of a local theater that was going out of business. He arranged for Yale to buy
some of its contents (including the popcorn machine) and persuaded the theater
to donate the rest. Crafton sold what Yale didn't need and used the proceeds
to buy the projector that now serves the screening room in the Humanities Center.
Some
opposition to the study of film lingers at Yale, although
it appears to be waning as the program proves its academic rigor
and its allies increase in number. "Not to study a major expression
of the world's many cultures is to say that part of our existence
shouldn't be taken seriously," argues Lamar. Nevertheless, students
and faculty sometimes feel pressed to justify their chosen field.
"There are people on campus who think all we do is sit around, watch
blockbusters, and eat popcorn," says Claire Cherlin '01, a film
studies major from Baltimore.
That couldn't be
further from reality. Yale's approach to teaching films has always been to stress
close analysis of the material in the context of language and culture. Thus
Yale's 45 or so classes on film all teach its value as a unique art form, as
a lens through which to examine the cultures that produce and consume it, and
as a body of literature meriting the same intellectual study as any other form
of text.
The faculty is aided
in this approach by the fact that film studies is an interdisciplinary
program. As such, it can -- and does -- call on the resources
of such departments and programs as comparative literature, American
studies, English, French, German, Italian, Slavic languages, Russian
and East European studies, African
American studies, history, art, anthropology, theater studies,
sociology, women's and gender studies, and political science.
The emphasis on a
traditional "literary" approach to the material has provoked charges that the
program is weak on the actual making of movies. Students complain that there
aren't enough writing and production classes and that those that are offered
are too difficult to get into. Moreover, graduate film-school administrators
say they're interested in students who can demonstrate that they can tell a
story through images.
Andrew and Musser
are sympathetic, but they are trying to allay this concern without overdoing
it. A production track within the major has been offered for about four years;
there is talk that at least one new production course is in the works, and Andrew
is asking his faculty to address more of the concerns of filmmakers even in
their theory and history classes. Says Musser: "You never completely understand
film until you shoot something. It allows you to better understand and analyze
what the filmmaker was trying to achieve."
Make no mistake,
though: Yale has no intention of becoming a production school akin to NYU, the
University of Southern California, or Andrew's alma mater, Iowa. "I don't think
we should ever become a filmmaking school," says Andrew. "If people want to
make films there are plenty of opportunities here outside class, or they can
find ways to go to NYU for a term. Film studies at the undergraduate level should
be about studying the history of images and the history of stories."
To
graduate, film majors must complete three required courses --
Introduction to Film Studies, Close Analysis of Film, and either
Film Theory and Aesthetics, or Issues in Contemporary Film Theory
-- along with two courses in international cinema. They then take
two more critical studies courses in film plus seven other classes
that reinforce the major. A small sampling of options includes courses
on French, Italian, Polish, Brazilian, and Japanese film; on the
movies of Hitchcock and Forman; on race and representation in American
film; on Nazi cinema; on film noir and classical Hollywood. Other
classes deal with representations of the city, justice, literature,
and theater in film.
There
are two screenwriting classes and three documentary-production workshops.
In addition, about two-thirds of this year's majors are either writing
a screenplay or producing a film as a senior project. The production
courses are taught by people to whom Musser refers as "national
filmmaking treasures:" Michael Roemer and D.A. Pennebaker. Roemer's
films include 1964's Nothing But a Man, which chronicled
life in the black south during the civil rights movement. Pennebaker's
work includes Don't Look Back, a 1966 documentary about singer
Bob Dylan, and The War Room, a 1993 look at Bill Clinton's
first presidential campaign. Andrew's influence is expected to deepen
a program that has been gaining respect outside the University.
"Yale has always had the makings of a great film program," says
Holquist. "All we lacked was a dynamic leader. Dudley is preeminently
that. In pairing Dudley with Charlie we have a great one-two punch."
Described by his
mentor, retired Iowa provost Sam Becker, as a "tremendously disciplined person
and a productive scholar who never takes time away from his students," Andrew
was well known to Yale before his arrival on campus. At Iowa he taught many
of Yale's own film professors, including Crafton, Rodowick, and Dalla Vacche.
He is credited with building one of the nation's top five film programs -- in
a Midwestern cornfield, no less, far from the coastal centers of gravity in
the entertainment business. But according to Steven Ungar, chair of Iowa's department
of cinema and comparative literature, his contribution included making film
part of the cultural life of the university. Andrew founded Iowa's Institute
for Cinema and Culture, a campus-wide resource for viewing, analyzing, and producing
films. He also founded an archive of French film, and he established many popular
film series, marathons, and symposia.
With barely a semester
under his belt, Andrew's influence is already being felt at Yale. His spring
course, World Cinema, drew 150 students. He produced an Irish film symposium,
the first in a series to be held at Yale. He is helping comparative literature
use film to boost the content of its non-Western international offerings. And
plans are under way to add at least one faculty member to film studies, improve
the quality of teaching assistants, help professors in other departments integrate
film into their teaching, upgrade Yale's film archive, and work toward a graduate
degree program.
While
he expects the undergraduate program to undergo minor change, Andrew
predicts that the "real rebuilding" will take place at the graduate
level. No one at Yale seems ready to commit to a graduate
degree in film, but Andrew says he hopes to enroll at least one
or two students in a graduate program in tandem with another department
within a few years. "I'm interested in locating students who already
are doing work in art history or comp lit, but who want to add film
to what they're doing," he says. "I don't necessarily have to have
a center or a giant graduate program. I can just be here in comp
lit and film studies. People will find me, I'll find them, and I'll
do my part in changing the graduate landscape."
The rejuvenation
of film studies is being accompanied by related progress beyond its own precinct.
Memberships have risen in University Pictures (UPIX) and the Yale Film Society
(YFS), and film-industry luminaries -- alumni and non-alumni alike -- are turning
up on campus with increasing frequency. UPIX has been a resource for student
filmmaking since 1983. It produces short films every semester, rents equipment
to students who want to make their own movies, and trains students in filmmaking.
The organization also stages two festivals a year devoted to student-made films.
Its membership has risen from about 15 last year to 50 this year; UPIX co-president
Elizabeth Newman '02 says many new members are film studies majors looking for
an outlet for their production skills.
The Yale Film Society,
created in 1958, is the only group of its kind left of the many that existed
on campus in the 1970s, when films were shown nearly every night of the week.
Video killed these organizations -- including YFS -- but film studies resurrected
it in 1997 after more than a decade-long slumber. Musser says this was intended
to give film majors access to experience -- such as talking with filmmakers
and dealing with distributors -- they won't get in class. YFS shows feature
films every Friday night and has a production arm that occasionally helps students
make their own movies.
UPIX
and YFS are among the many organizations that also bring filmmakers
and actors to campus for lectures, discussions, master's teas, and
screenings. With a roster of alumni that reads like a Who's Who
of the entertainment business, Yale routinely offers students up-close
exposure to creative and executive talent. Recent visitors include
Oliver Stone '68, Al Pacino, and Spike Lee; producers David Milch
'66 (Hill Street Blues and NYPD Blue) and Ken Burns
(The Civil War); Dreamworks SKG executive Walter Parkes '73;
actor Kenneth Branagh; and Andrew Mondshein (editor of Chocolat).
Alumni
have contributed in other ways, too. Milch taught a creative writing
class and provided internships for students. Roger Mayer '48, president
and chief operating officer of Turner Entertainment Co., arranged
for the department to borrow 35mm prints of classics from his company's
film library. Parkes, the head of the motion picture division at
Dreamworks, donated about 100 movie scripts to Yale's screenplay
collection and arranged campus screenings of movies before their
public release. Yale students saw The Peacemaker, Amistad,
and American Beauty before almost anyone else in America.
Other alumni have contributed money to restart YFS, to expand Yale's
film and video collection, and to purchase digital editing equipment.
All of this adds
up to what Roemer describes as an "unstoppable" film energy on campus
and a potential that Yale's cinema program may soon play in the
academic big leagues. With a beefed-up undergraduate program, the
promise of a graduate degree and better facilities bolstered by
extracurricular experience, Yale is building an environment that
is beginning to offer students a balance of thinking and doing --
with a long-term investment in an infrastructure to back it up.
As Crafton, now chair of the department of film, television, and
theatre at Notre Dame, says: "Once you get the infrastructure in
place, it's almost as hard to get it out of place as it was to put
it in in the first place." For those who have survived Yale's bumpy
film ride, words like those are a reason to smile.
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