Movies and the Good Life
University of South Florida
Course Description:
We will investigate how various traditions have developed distinct visions in response to these questions. Students will gain the skill sets necessary to think critically, evaluate controversial arguments, and engage in theoretical discussions pertaining to philosophical and religious beliefs and arguments. We will examine how these traditions regard the place of bodily pleasures, intellectual pursuits, power, status, possessions, accomplishments, virtues, relationship with other human beings and the relationship (or not) with the transcendent in their vision of a good life. We will explore the resources they offer for dealing with stress, temptations, disappointments and failures, social oppression, the loss of possessions and of loved ones, and with one’s own death. As such, our focus is holistic, examining not just arguments and beliefs, but ways of living.
The relationship of these visions to film is twofold. First, films help us understand more holistically what these visions of the good life look like concretely (we are watching the Buddha meditating). Second, critically analyzing films and the dilemmas and choices their characters make can be a useful way to self-examine and practice a vision (the Buddha meditates on the film of himself); they can also offer deeply compelling stories in which we immerse ourselves, becoming attracted or repelled to visions in a more than purely intellectual way. In both ways, films enable us to inhabit various visions of the good life in ways that merely reading about them
cannot. Thus, in the course of the semester, students will also learn how to interpret films as manifestations of different visions of the good life and evaluate their characters in terms of how well they instantiate these visions.




