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BA (Hons) in Film Studies


Awarding Body:

Higher Education & Training Awards Council (HETAC)

NQAI Level:

Level 8 (Honours Bachelor Degree)

Course Length:

3 years 

CAO Code:

DB567 (see page 40 of CAO Handbook)

 

 

Films are now central to our experience of the world and the BA (Hons) in Film Studies at Dublin Business School offers an opportunity to embark upon an invigorating and detailed exploration of this most pervasive and compelling of mediums. Across the three years of the programme you will engage with the full range of critical, theoretical, historical and other relevant debates that have accompanied the evolution of the cinema. You will also have the opportunity to experience the practical aspect of the subject and discover the many ways in which the practical and the critical combine to further develop your understanding of how films work. Whether studying the earliest documentary footage of workers leaving factories or the watching the latest animated blockbuster the study of Film at Dublin Business School is an exciting, challenging and wholly rewarding experience.

 

 

Aims and Objectives

 

From the earliest experiments with the photographic image to the most recent innovations in digital storytelling the BA (Hons) in Film Studies programme has been designed to enable the learner to understand the study of film as an ongoing exploration of an extraordinarily diverse set of related practices. Moving from textual meaning to cultural identity, via the relevant theoretical, critical, historical, political, economic, technological and other allied debates, this programme will introduce the learner to a wide range of cinematic traditions and provide a framework for developing an understanding of the many ways in which this most enduring of mediums has come to be understood. The programme will comprise of three complementary and interlocking elements, the critical, the practical, and the developmental. Each of these elements informs and contributes to the others whilst also maintaining an individual integrity.

 

 

The Critical

 

Central to the learner’s experience of this programme will be the opportunity to develop an ongoing and deepening relationship with the critical, theoretical, historical, technological and other relevant debates that take the medium as their point of reference. As they progress learners will also be able to cultivate an awareness of the ways in which these debates have shaped and continue to shape the study of film through intersection, synthesis and counterpoint. A further cornerstone of this critical element of the programme will be the opportunity to account for the various ways in which the study of Film has developed as an interdisciplinary field through the appropriation and application of methodologies and intellectual impulses originating from other disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences. All of the modules that comprise the critical strand of the programme have been designed to present learners with the broadest opportunity to engage with the study of the medium whilst also providing them with the appropriate critical and analytical tools necessary to make this engagement an enduring and life-long one. As a department, Creative Arts and Media is a wholly research-committed department and this will add significant further value to the learner’s experience of the programme.

 

 

The Practical  

 

To further aid this desire for engagement the academic rigour of the programme is complemented by a more practically oriented strand designed to provide learners with the opportunity to develop relevant vocational skills and thereby further inform their understanding of how the medium works. Across the whole programme learners will engage in a range of practical activities intended to provide progression from the taking of a single digital photograph to the later involvement in larger and more collaborative projects like the making of a short film or the organising of installations and exhibitions. Other relevant opportunities for vocational development, like acquiring skills in digital imaging, editing and other areas of post-production, as well as developing scripts, are also included in this practical strand of the programme. All of this, combined with the fact that many of the staff involved in the department of Creative Arts have direct and relevant industrial experience further ensures that this aspect of the learner’s experience is significant and long-lasting.

 

 

The Developmental 

 

Finally, and equally importantly, the critical and practical strands of the programme are also interwoven with a developmental strand designed to enable the learner to participate in their own ongoing development of the relevant transferable and work specific skills required for further academic study and/or making a significant contribution to the workplace. The programme will allow the learner to develop good organisational and time management skills as well as also acquiring a variety of other key skills including effective written and verbal communication, public speaking and presentations, project management and IT skills. The programme has also been designed to allow learners the opportunity to work flexibly and creatively as individuals and in group situations whilst also developing the capacity for independent thought and self-directed learning. In this way, diplomacy, dedication and determination also become further indicators of the learner’s progression. At all stages of the programme, the emphasis is on developing the learner’s personal and academic confidence through regular feedback and continued involvement in a lively and varied learning environment founded on the desires for active participation and ongoing engagement.

 

 

Further Career & Study Options 

 

Whether entering the workplace or progressing onto postgraduate study, graduates from the BA (Hons) in Film Studies will be extremely well-placed to make their next developmental step a significant one. The acquisition of knowledge in a wide range of film-related areas would enable graduates to move into a variety of creative and cultural industries including film and film-related employment, advertising, marketing, public relations, journalism, publishing, television, broadcasting. In addition, the acquiring of practical production skills would increase the variety of potential career destinations by allowing possible access to jobs in development, production, post production, distribution or exhibition. Though this is likely to be a very competitive sector for graduates seeking entry the development of these skills on the programme will also allow entry onto vocational training courses to further develop specialist skills in all areas of production and post-production. This will further enhance the graduate’s future career prospects.

Graduates from this programme will also be able to enter other sectors where a good Arts degree is recognised as being beneficial. These may include professional and administrative positions in industry and commerce, the Civil Service, education, teaching, social service and welfare, leisure and tourism, finance, business, IT, multimedia, law, and librarianship. Furthermore, the developmental strand of the BA (Hons) in Film Studies ensures that its graduates are able to work flexibly and creatively as individuals and in groups, capable of independent thought, self-directed in their outlook, diplomatic, dedicated and determined. This is a further guarantee that wherever graduates find themselves in the future they will have been provided with the perfect developmental platform to make a significant contribution. Additionally, the exposure to methodologies and the development of critical and analytical skills will also ensure that graduates from this programme will be able to progress to postgraduate study in areas directly related to the study of Film or other cognate subjects.

 

Programme Content

 

 

Year 1 

  • Film Studies Learning Lab
  • American Cinema and Society
  • Critical Approaches to Film
  • Introduction to European Cinema/Introduction to World Cinema
  • Understanding the Image
  • Introduction to Production and Post-Production Skills

Year 2

  • New Waves in European and World Cinema
  • Understanding Film
  • Film Style, Stardom and Performance
  • Documentary and Non Fiction Film/Experimental and Avant-Garde Film & Video
  • Scriptwriting, Production and Development

Year 3

  • Contemporary American Cinema/Contemporary World Cinema
  • Cinema and Nation
  • Film in the Digital Age
  • Film Theory and Criticism
  • Final Year Projects

 

Learner protection for this programme is provided in accordance with Section 43 of the Qualifications (Education and Training ) Act 1999.

 

 

 

 

Check out www.dbscreativeartsandmedia.ie This is a dedicated website designed to showcase the work of the DBS School of Creative Arts & Media students and academic staff. This is world where experience, knowledge and innovation merge.This is a world where your learning and creativity know no limits!

 


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