Columbia_University_in_popular_culture

Columbia University in popular culture

Columbia University in popular culture

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Columbia University in New York City, New York, as one of the oldest universities in the United States, has been the subject of numerous aspects of popular culture. Film historian Rob King explains that the university's popularity with filmmakers has to do with its being one of the few colleges with a physical campus located in New York City, and its neoclassical architecture, which "aestheticizes America’s intellectual history," making Columbia an ideal shooting location and setting for productions that involve urban universities.[1] Additionally, campus monuments such as Alma Mater and the university's copy of The Thinker have come to symbolize academic reflection and university prestige in popular culture.[1] Room 309 in Havemeyer Hall has been described as the most filmed college classroom in the United States.[2]

Low Memorial Library and Alma Mater as depicted in the Daredevil comics

Historical events on Columbia's campus have also served to draw attention to the university. The Beat Generation, which began at Columbia with students Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and Lucien Carr, among others, is often associated with the university, which served as a conservative backdrop to the writers' literary experimentation.[1][3] The university has often been portrayed in relation to the movement, including in Vanity of Duluoz by Kerouac and the film Kill Your Darlings, which depicts the earliest days of the movement at Columbia.[4][5]

The Columbia University protests of 1968 were the target of heavy media attention while they transpired,[6] and since have been the subject of numerous depictions, including memoirs, such as The Strawberry Statement by James Simon Kunen and the film based on it;[7] novels, such as 4 3 2 1 by Paul Auster;[8] films, such as Across the Universe and 84 Charing Cross Road;[9] and numerous documentaries, including Columbia Revolt and A Time to Stir, edited by Paul Cronin.[10][11] The protests have also been the subject of significant academic inquiry,[12] and has, along with subsequent protests throughout the decades, cemented Columbia's reputation as a hotbed for counterculture and student activism.[13][14]

Film

Daniel Radcliffe on Low Steps filming Kill Your Darlings, 2012
Scarlett Johansson at Columbia University during the shooting of The Nanny Diaries, 2006

Movies making reference to Columbia and/or featuring scenes shot on Columbia's campus include:

Music

Video games

Due to its location in Manhattan, Columbia's campus frequently appears in video games that seek to replicate New York City in their maps, such as Grand Theft Auto IV (2008), as Vespucci University in the neighborhood of Varsity Heights;[24] Assassin's Creed III (2012), as King's College in the late 18th century;[25] and Marvel's Spider-Man (2018) and Spider-Man 2 (2023).[24] The designs for university buildings in Cities: Skylines are based on the neoclassical architecture of the university.[24]

Fictional Columbians

More information Character, Appearances ...

References

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