Undergraduate Program



 

Fall 2009

RTF 178
RTF Internship

RTF 305
Intro to Media Studies

RTF 309
Comm Tech & Society

RTF 312C
Global Media

RTF 314
Dev of Motion Picture

RTF 316
History of US Radio & TV

RTF 316M
Race, Ethnicity, and the Media

RTF 317
Narrative Strategies

RTF 318
Intro to Image & Sound

RTF 319
Intro to Digital Media

RTF 330K
Intro to Research Methods

RTF 330M
Internship in Digital Media

RTF 331K
Screen Theory - W

RTF 331M
New Comm Tech Topic

RTF 331R
Soundscapes

RTF 331R
Trans: Dangerous Border Violations

RTF 331R
Blackbox

RTF 333
Intro to Screenwriting

RTF 334
Children and Media

RTF 336
Special Projects in RTF

RTF 337
Radio

RTF 340
Studio Production

RTF 341
Audio Production

RTF 342
Global Media, New Media and Migration

RTF 343
Advanced Documentary

RTF 343
Adv Doc: Social Issues Filmmaking

RTF 343
Advanced Narrative

RTF 343M
Master Class in Digital Media
CANCELLED

RTF 344M
Digital Media/Digital Art

RTF 344M
Interactive Documentary

RTF 344M
Visual Effects & Motion Graphics

RTF 345
American Cinema of the 1930's

RTF 346
Intro to Editing | 3 sections

RTF 346C
Intermediate Editing

RTF 347C
Broadcast & Cable Management

RTF 348
Local TV Promotion & Marketing

RTF 351C
Intro to Digital Animation & Graphics
2 sections

RTF 359
Asian American Media Cultures

RTF 359
Youth and Social Media

RTF 359
Media Memory & History-W

RTF 359S
Women & Media Culture-W

RTF 365
Race, Class, and Media

RTF 366D
Directing Workshop
2 sections

RTF 366K
Documentary Production

RTF 366K
Narrative Production
3 sections

RTF 367K
Producing

RTF 367L
16mm Narrative Filmmaking

RTF 367P
Advanced Producing

RTF 368
UTFI Practicum

RTF 368
Cinematography

RTF 369
Adv. Writing: Features - W
2 sections

RTF 369
Adv Writing: Series TV - W

RTF 370
Art and Cinema

RTF 370
Film Analysis & Criticism - W
Hitchcock Films

RTF 378H
Honors Tutorial

RTF Signature Course
History of World Cinema

UTLA Program
Fall 09 Courses

 

RTF 331R – Soundscapes

INSTRUCTOR: Stone

UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR (for course times & locations)

SUBSTANTIAL WRITING COMPONENT: No | COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE: No

COURSE SYLLABUS: PDF

DESCRIPTION: Sound and its concomitant, noise, define our spaces of interaction and creation, provide clues to social roles, enhance or inhibit sensuality, produce and modulate emotion. Sound can not only define spaces of action but can create plausible worlds. In this course we study a broad range of topics under the general rubric of sound, but we will focus on using sound as a machine for creating active space, sonic environments through which one physically moves, which may change in response to human presence and action, and which evoke emotional response. We will use computers, sensors, and objects we make as means to achieve this. You will learn to think in 3-d; these aural spaces are analogous to the environments you would create if you chose sound design for film as your work.

The course is in ACTLab studio format. This means we teach that thinking doesn't only take place in the head, but that our entire bodies are involved in learning (action methods), so besides making stuff you will have reading and listening assignments and movement exercises. For the first part of class we will discuss assigned readings. For the remainder of the time (i.e., most of class time) you will make stuff. What you make and how you make it will emerge from our interactions in class. You will produce a project every month -- a simple one, a more complex one, and a final project that sums up what you have learned during the semester. All will involve sound (or noise) in some form. You may team up for the final project provided that it's sufficiently complex to represent a semester's work for each team member and provided that we can clearly tell who did what. You will have four weeks to construct the final project. Final presentations will be open to the public. There are no written exams. We'll take some field trips. We'll show some films and play a lot of recordings.

FIRST CLASS DAY POLICY: Students must attend the first class day or they will be dropped.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Non-RTF majors are welcome in this class.

    

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