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Undergraduate Education Overview

Courses Offered for the Upcoming Semester

Current and Past Semester Courses


Instructors

Undergraduate Certificate

Documentary Studies Courses and Cross-Listed Courses

Lehman Brady Visiting Joint Chair Professor in Documentary Studies and American Studies

Student Opportunities at CDS





Past Semester Courses

Spring 2006

DOCST 100S Children and the Experience of Illness

Instructor: Moses
W 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 113)
An exploration of how children cope with illness, incorporating the tools of documentary photography and writing. Students will work outside class with a child who is ill and teach them how to use a Polaroid camera, working toward an exhibit of photographs at the end of the semester. Consent of instructor required. No prerequisites.


DOCST 115 Introduction to Photography
Instructor: Hunter
MW 10:05–11:20 (Lyndhurst 201)
Foundation class in black-and-white photographic process as the basis for using photography as a visual language. Students learn to make a printable exposure using black-and-white film, make a "proper proof," and make an 8 x 10 enlargement. Assignments include portraits, alternative techniques, landscape, and a final portfolio that embodies a single visual idea. Consent of instructor required.


DOCST 118S Alternative Photo Processes
Instructor: Hunter
Th 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 201)
Survey of historic photographic processes, including Gun Bichromate, Cyanotype, Kalotype, and Platinum/Palladium printing. Consent of instructor required.


DOCST 120S Documentary Research Methods
Instructor: Avots
W 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 201)
A how-to course in doing research for documentaries, including film, photography, audio, and narrative projects. Students will collaborate on a class project, using fieldwork in the community, local archives, and other resources to document a chapter of Durham history. Students will find and analyze documents, oral histories, photographs, and artifacts, as well as examine intersections between documentary and history, analyzing key contributions to the documenting of American and European history throughout the past century. Discussion topics include: memory, truth, objectivity, propaganda, narrative, audience, and authority. As a final project, students have the opportunity to research a documentary interest of their own. No experience in film, photography, or audio documentary necessary.


DOCST 122S Visual Research and the American Dream
Instructor: Hyde
M 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 201)
This field-based course combines both documentary and sociological approaches to examine the idea of the American Dream, and its cultural and material symbols. Selected readings will guide the course. Students will also look at documentary photography and film as well as visual sociological research in order to understand the ways different groups of people relate to the American Dream, the circumstances under which the dream has failed many Americans, and the cultural conditions that limit viability of counter-ideologies. Students will learn how documentarians and sociologists use visual methods (such as shooting scripts, photo-elicitation, and photo essays) to tell about society. Students will complete a semester-long documentary project that will be divided into specific assignments using various forms of visual research.


DOCST 129 Contemporary Documentary Films
Instructor: Paletz/Rankin
M 1:30–4:30 (Nasher 105)
Integrated with the films and filmmakers of the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. The art, form, and technology of documentary films. Continuity and change in the style, issues, and politics of contemporary documentary filmmaking. Analysis of outstanding films from around the world. Presentations and discussions by filmmakers.


DOCST 150S Intermediate Documentary Filmmaking
Instructor: Hawkins
Th 3:05–5:25 Th 7:30–8:45 (Lyndhurst 104)
Intermediate to advanced filmmaking techniques. Presumes a working knowledge of Final Cut Pro, mini-DV camera, and some fieldwork experience with a camcorder. Topics include fieldwork in a variety of communities and work on pertinent social and cultural issues. Prerequisite: Documentary Studies 105S or equivalent experience and knowledge. Consent of instructor required.


DOCST 155S Hearing Is Believing: Intermediate Audio Documentary
Instructor: Biewen
M 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 001)
Intermediate to advanced audio documentary techniques. Presumes a working knowledge of field recording and Protools, or similar audio editing software, building on knowledge gained either from classes in our program or similar audio documentary production experience. Topics include fieldwork with an audio recorder in a variety of cultural settings. Students will work with instructor on a particular social issue but will also work independently on a broadcast-quality audio production suitable for radio or podcasting. Prerequisite: DOCST 135S or similar production experience and knowledge. Consent of instructor required.


DOCST 164S Who Cares and Why: Social Activism and Its Motivations

Instructor: Thompson
W 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 001)
Documentary fieldwork based research on the lives of people who have committed themselves to changing society. Life history interviews exploring personal and societal transformations with special attention to the antecedents to personal change leading to examined lives of commitment. Attention to various areas of social change, including human rights, civil rights, international activism, labor rights, and environmental activism. Focus on societal and personal questions regarding motivations for, and the effectiveness of, good works in several cultural settings.

View Web site documenting course trip to post-Katrina New Orleans


DOCST 176S American Communities: Photography
Instructor: Post-Rust
W 7:15–9:45 (Smith Warehouse Arts Media Lab 228)
Theory and practice of documentary photography. Course of study includes exploration of the documentary tradition and classic documentary books with emphasis on photographs produced by the students. Students complete a documentary photography project of a community outside the university. Consent of instructor, Susie Post-Rust, required.


DOCST 190S.01 Civil Rights and Labor Struggles
Instructor: Rubio
Th 3:05-5:35 (Lyndhurst 001)
Oral history fieldwork and “writing in the discipline” seminar. Encourages students through readings and practical activity to think critically about connections between civil rights and labor history in the U.S. Emphasis on creating an independent oral history research project based on an interview with someone whose life story relates to civil rights and labor struggles at Duke or in the Durham area; the finished product should be ready for archiving. Course develops an understanding of the methodological as well as technical components of oral history interviewing, different kinds of writing on history and culture, and discovering an original writing style.


DOCST 190S.02 Viewing Race: Films and Jim Crow South
Instructor: Jones
W 6:15–8:45 (Lyndhurst Auditorium)
Focusing on the historical and political mechanisms constructed and maintained in the Jim Crow South, this course uses audio interviews from the Behind the Veil oral history collection, documentary and commercial films (D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation and Macky Alston’s Family Name, among others), and other relevant materials to present students with authentic documentary portrayals of African American life during the age of Southern racial segregation. Students will read seminal works and secondary materials that coincide with the interviews and films, as well as write film critiques and a research paper that explores the collective history of African American Southerners. Note: readings average approximately 100–200 pages per week.


DOCST 190S.03 Freedom Stories: Documenting Southern Lives and Writing Movement History
Instructor: Tyson
T 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 113)
Documentary writing course focusing on race and storytelling in the South. Human beings in general and Southerners in particular have always told stories, preserving their lives and defining their cultures. While historians continue the age-old traditions of storytellers, they bring to the modern campfire an array of resources—archival research, quantitative and qualitative analysis—ancient storytellers never envisioned. Yet some historians, in their quest to refine these tools, forget their obligation to speak to and for broader communities that suffer from a dangerous and deepening social amnesia. Course will use both fiction and autobiography in addition to traditional history books to examine how Southerners have used historical narratives to find meaning in the past and possibility in the future, focusing especially on the ways that Southerners have tried to transform American politics and culture. Students will read these books paired with narratives and create alternatives using documentary research, interviews, memories, and the raw stuff of life. Students will gain a more sophisticated understanding of documents and narratives, a stronger understanding of twentieth-century racial politics, and sharper writing skills, as they engage in an ongoing community-based democratic conversation.


DOCST 190S.04 Telling Our Stories: Poetry and Historical Imagination

Instructor: Trethewey
T 3:05–5:35 (Lyndhurst 201)
Uncovering personal and community stories through poetic storytelling. Students will engage with poetry about places, cultures, and personal pasts through readings and their own writing. Fieldwork-based research is strongly recommended (course may involve group field trips), as students turn experiences into verse.


DOCST 196S Capstone Seminar
Instructor: Harris
M 3:05-5:35 (Smith Warehouse Arts Media Lab 228)
Immersion in fieldwork-based inquiry and in-depth projects that serve as Certificate in Documentary Studies capstone experiences for students. Methods of documentary fieldwork, including participant observation, and modes of arts and humanities interpretation through a variety of mediums (including papers, film, photography exhibits, radio pieces, and performances). Consent of instructor required. Prerequisite: DOCST 101 and four DOCST electives.





See listing of required and elective certificate courses

Fall 2005

Spring 2005

Fall 2004

Spring 2004

Fall 2003

Spring 2003





banner image:

Untitled, from the series Latino Pastimes—La Vida y el Fútbol. Photograph by William L. Plaxico, from the course "Documentary Photography and the Southern Cultural Landscape," taught by Professor Tom Rankin.



 


 
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