The Nature of Titanic: Film, Phenomenon and Inevitable Self-Betrayal

May 26, 1999
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This paper was written for “Environmental Sociology,” a Sociology course given by Dr. Sharon Zukin that was part of Mark’s customized curriculum in the City University of New York Graduate Center’s Master of Arts in Liberal Studies program. It explores the various meanings of the film Titanic from an ecological perspective.

Dr. Zukin called it “totally original.”

Read the The Nature of Titanic: Film, Phenomenon and Inevitable Self-Betrayal .pdf.

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4 Responses to The Nature of Titanic: Film, Phenomenon and Inevitable Self-Betrayal

  1. Lost, Found: Pilot, Part 2 | Potluck on August 20, 2008 at 2:56 pm

    [...] Titanic in chronological order rather than thematically. After seeing the look on her face, I did a rewrite, and I admit it’s a better way to write criticism and analysis. But chronological is exactly [...]

  2. titanic download on November 3, 2008 at 7:01 pm

    Interesting analysis

  3. Lost, Found: That Sinking Feeling | Potluck on May 5, 2010 at 10:14 pm

    [...] the pat contrivances of good and evil. But they somehow seem to betray themselves. Star Wars. Titanic. Sunk has given me a bit of that sinking feeling [...]

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