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Scholarship March 29, 2017

“Making the Most of a Good Story: Effective Use of Film as a Teaching Resource for Ethics”

The Wabash Center

Author
Marshall, Ellen Ott
Publisher
Teaching Theology and Religion 6, no. 2 (2003): 93-98
Many faculty members reach for powerful clips or entire films to give background information to a topic or to provoke discussion. We do this because we have a sense that such materials engage students in a way that more theoretical texts, speculative discussions, or even case studies do not. In the field of ethics, however, one meets resistance to employing narratives that are too engaging. The wary ethicist doubts that a medium that manipulates the viewer, engages the emotions, and elicits a personal connection to the characters is the best resource for ethical reflection. This paper argues that film, like other narrative forms, is indeed an appropriate medium for teaching ethics and suggests methods for doing so effectively.