¶ … Richard Stites taught for over 50 years, and asserts that the most successful course during these years was a pro-seminar class designed for first-year students in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. The surprising title of the course, Europe in World War II: History and Film, seems a better fit once the reader learns that Stites has used full-length film in his courses for years. The films have given his students perspective on Russian popular culture, the U.S.S.R. And the United State in the 20th century, and Europe during World War II. As the Distinguished Professor of International Studies in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, Stites has enable students to assume the role of historians as they view and analyze film. I chose the film The Pawnbroker for two main reasons: First, Stites considers it "the finest American fiction feature movie ever made about the Holocaust[and he believes that it] belongs in any course on the Holocaust where film is used. The second reason is because the American fiction feature film, The Pawnbroker (1964), was directed by the master of cinema, Sidney Lumet, who made more than 40 films in his lifetime. It is noteworthy that Lumet made his feature film debut with the remarkable 12 Angry Men. Many of Lumet films were complex, non-sentimental, emotional films, and a number of the films he directed became...
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