Memorial Day
No Class Today. See you on Tuesday!
No Class Today. See you on Tuesday!
To get a better sense of the context in which Northup published his narrative, take a look at page four from the Sep 9, 1847, issue of The National Era a broadsheet newspaper published in Washington DC. I’ve linked the newspaper page at right. (You’ll need to zoom in to read the small print!)
Skim through 4 or 5 items (articles, essays, poems, advts) in the newspaper to get a sense of its politics. Then focus on one item in particular and write a brief ¶ to post as HW: first, identify the item you focused on, then use details from that item to assert something about the hopes, fears, politics, or aesthetic of the newspaper and its readership.
Introduce class aims, design, schedule, policies.
Introduce Essay 1 on 12 Years a Slave. View party this evening.
McQueen’s movie based on an 1853 slave narrative by Solomon Northup. Look at the title page and discuss the rhetorical mission of this and other slave narratives, based on what was learned in Humanities last semester.
Break into groups to discuss the rhetorical and aesthetic function of one of the illustrations:
Create a short (1-2 min) version of your video.
Script: a ¶ or two, written in a conversational style, communicating what’s exciting about the exhibit you’ve chosen to focus on. Think of this as an “elevator pitch”: a quick introduction to your planned topic that communicates why your full video should be funded.
Movie: 1-2 minutes, using your elevator pitch script as an audio track and drawing from multiple video shots. I recommend that you export from iMovie at 720p resolution. Look for “Share” in the file menu. You can opt to “share” directly to YouTube, or as a file saved on your hard drive (which you can then upload to YouTube via your Web browser). Once you have uploaded your trial run to YouTube, paste a link in the comments; we’ll watch them all in class.
This is your chance to get good peer feedback on your video style/technique. Don’t spend too much time on this assignment, but put in enough time to ensure that the feedback is useful.
Make a preliminary choice as to the museum exhibit you will cover in the upcoming video essay. Revisit it and take a wealth of photographs and video clips (50+) in an effort to capture not just the exhibit itself, but its fine details, its explanatory placards, its lighting and ambience, its larger surroundings, and the way that visitors interact with it.
Responding to the appropriate comment below, upload a photo and a few words describing:
Watch the following video essays:
In the comments below, note techniques employed by Tom Scott to engage his viewers’ interest and to teach them.
In addition, if you have a favorite YouTube educator, link a video that you like. For purposes of the upcoming video essay assignment, I’m particularly interested in videos that teach by reference to museum exhibits, interesting locations or (more generally) tourist destinations.
[spoiler title=’Exhibits Plug’] [/spoiler]Winston Churchill is often credited with having said, “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” He never said those words, but the misquotation likely arose from the legend of Britain’s lonely stand against Germany. After the Germans overran Holland, Belgium and northern France, forcing the evacuation of British and French troops at Dunkirk, the French government capitulated to German occupation in June 1940. For twelve months, Britain faced Germany alone, enduring bombing raids that devastated London and southern England—though with military support from the US in the form of the “Lend-Lease” program. The British people’s proud defiance of German tyranny during the Battle of Britain is a commonplace of popular history. But this narrative was invented by Churchill himself a month before France’s capitulation, in the speech he delivered on the occasion of the Dunkirk evacuation: “We shall go on to the end.” Such is the power of his words that they did not merely rally popular support; they created the legend that we invariably repeat whenever we rehearse the history of the months that followed.
For class, please listen to Churchill’s Dunkirk speech. The video linked here has visuals drawn from contemporary photographs. You may find them helpful or you may find them distracting; either way, your focus should be on Churchill’s words, tone, pacing, delivery.
Then listen to Franklin Delano Roosevelt Pearl Harbor speech. Delivered before a joint session of Congress just a day after the Pearl Harbor attack on Dec 7, 1941, Roosevelt made a brief but persuasive case for war; Congress declared war on Japan just 33 minutes later.
In the Comments section, post:
Adolf Hitler’s Closing Address to the Nazi Party Congress in September, 1934: DailyMotion (alternatively, non-subtitled version, text translation here). Don’t take notes, just watch. Then reflect. Then write down what you found most striking about this filmed speech, creating a list of 10 key qualities that contribute to its oratorical impact. Post one of them in reply to the appropriate comment below (and if someone else has already posted yours, post a different one).
An excerpt from The Ethics and Politics of Speech, a history of the rise and eventual transformation of rhetoric as an academic field during the 20th century. Pat Gehrke’s account of the “Hitler Problem” neatly captures the issue I want to see you debate and deliberate in the essay for this week.
After reading, in reply to the appropriate comment below post a short 1-2 sentence quotation from Gehrke that captures his central thought. If someone has already posted your top choice, find a different one to post, something that’s still important for understanding the historical context for the debate over Hitler’s oratory.
[spoiler title=’The Problem of Translation’] Three Translations of the Sep 8, 1934, speech, compared.[/spoiler]Look ahead to the essay assignment due on Sunday and start thinking about what you want to write on. What passage(s) from Sontag do you plan to engage with? (Likely just one; two at most.) What photographic practice from the present day will you draw on? Will you apply Sontag as a lens to make sense of your photographs? Or will you use your photographs as evidence to patch a gap in Sontag’s theory?
For HW, assemble a collection of photographs that epitomizes the photographic practice you want to focus on. Five to ten photos is probably ideal, even though in your essay you’ll likely focus on just a few of them, since it’s nice to be spoiled for choice. Responding to my “Body of Evidence” comment below, please post:
Since I’m hoping to see better titles on this upcoming essay, as a separate post respond to my “Titles” comment with a clever title. Aim to capture in words what your essay will do, its topic and mission. Usually titles are noun phrases (“A Tourist’s Best Friend”) and not sentences (“The Camera is a Tourist’s Best Friend”). You can use a subtitle to specify the essay’s topical focus: “A Tourist’s Best Friend: Photography and Travel.”
On Photography is a collection of essays written by Susan Sontag in the 1970s and originally published in the New York Review of Books. Sontag is a provocative writer, engaging our attention with startling and often counterintuitive claims about the function of photographic imagery in our society. She writes as a public intellectual rather than as an academic—you’ll note the absence of footnotes or other source citation. Some of her analysis may seem outdated in the digital era, but other points will strike you as truer now than ever before.
That dynamic is something I want you to watch for: as you read, consider how her claims about the social and cultural roles of photography play out in the present day. Look for opportunities to make connections to the way you and your friends use digital images on social media—and for that matter to the behavior of tourists around London. At the same time, be sensitive to differences, whether dramatic or merely nuanced, between the photographic culture of the 1970s as described by Sontag and the mobile phone/social media landscape of the present day.
Responding to the appropriate comment below, please post:
Note: if you encounter problems posting a photo, try editing the photo in Preview or Photoshop, changing the file type to .jpg or even .png. If that doesn’t work, save it as a .pdf and upload that.