The Eye Generation Prefers Not to Read All About It
Schwartz is describing how the two main characters in the student film will sit on a couch, simultaneously reach for popcorn and inadvertently touch hands, when Kit Reiner of Silver Spring and Max Simon of Potomac -- both 18 -- cry out, "Just like in 'Lady and the Tramp'!"Hmm... a reporter sits in on a summer film class, and is shocked --- SHOCKED!! -- to learn that the students who are motivated enough to pay for it are likely to think in visual terms. What is this world coming to?
And Schwartz could take it no more. "Stop!" he yells.
"Try to think less about which movie scene you are reminded of and more about the way people really act in real life. Everything isn't related to a movie!"
Really?
To most of the workshop students, life has become totally visual. They are members of not so much the Me Generation as the Eye Generation.
"I really don't like reading a story. I like seeing it," says workshop student Craig Patterson, 17, of Grove City, Ohio. "I almost always prefer the movie version of a book. Movies can capture the beauty of an image more than books can." --Linton Weeks --The Eye Generation Prefers Not to Read All About It (Washington Post (will expire))
To be fair, the subhead is "Students in Film Class a Microcosm of a Visually Oriented Culture," so the WashPo makes it clear these are not random students. And even among English majors (who one would think are more likely than the average student to be interested in reading), I do often notice that even students who are excited by writing often approach a first-person narrative as if they are describing a movie. Thus, they write "A big smile spread across my face" or "I gave him a puzzled look," conveying the interior state of their first-person protagonist from an external, visual point of view. Most have never considered alternatives, such as quoting dialogue ("You remembered the violets!") or the protagonist's unvoiced thought ("Was Smitty trying to use a 20-gauge reamer on a blown gasket? God, what I wouldn't do to get away from these clueless hicks!"). If you plan the story to SHOW why the protagonist likes violets, and even if you don't actually stop to explain what a 20-gague reamer is and why a hick would think it was appropriate to use on a blown gasket, when the protagonist's reaction to the violets or the reamers convey information about character, setting, plot, etc., then the details have done their job.
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Another great article! Thanks for posting to it and good point about the 'external camera' that novice writers will default to when telling their stories. The summer film class in the article, it's worth noting, was a PRODUCTION course, rather than a history, analysis, or theory course -- so the students are inherently going to think in terms of allusions and so forth, too. The key point in the article, I think, is this one: "Students are taught how to read and how to react critically to literature, but not about visual images." This is, in a nutshell, precisely why we need to teach film and tv in the humanities, if not under the penumbra of NMJ. This is a key point we should raise during program review. You with me?
Yes, I agree. Any such program would need to be defined as active and participatory, so that students don't get the idea that they can "get credit for watching movies" (just as I want students who take my "Video Game Culture and Theory" course in January to understand that they won't "get credit for playing games").