166-210 Political Communication | |
|---|---|
Availability | 2nd and 3rd year |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
Coordinator | Michael Crozier |
Prerequisites | Usually 25 points of first-year politics or admission to the Bachelor of Public Policy and Management. |
Semester | 2 (view timetable) |
Contact | Thirty contact hours per semester. A 2-hour lecture per week for 10 weeks and 1-hour tutorial per week for 10 weeks. The lecture and tutorial programs are staggered and cover the 12 weeks of semester |
Subject Description | This subject examines the role of communication systems in the constitution of contemporary political and social life. It pays particular attention to the new modes and means of political communication given the developments in information technologies and global reach. It introduces students to a number of different approaches to the understanding and analysis of political communication in the information age. The subject explores substantive topics such as political consultants and spin-doctoring; civic malaise; virtual war; political scandal; distant emotion; cyberdemocracy; network society; and shock-jock politics. On completion of this subject, students should have an understanding of a number of the key configurations of contemporary political communication. |
Generic Skills |
|
Assessment | A bibliographical note of 500 words 10% (due mid-semester), a research essay of 2000 words 65% (due at the end of semester) and a 2-hour examination 25% (during the examination period). |
Prescribed Texts | A subject reader will be available. |
Status: Official 2005 Last Modified: Saturday May 28 22:13 SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Division - CWIS (SDI) Authorised by: Academic Registrar Enquiries: http://unimelb.custhelp.com/