Faculty of Arts

Table of Contents

1. Time commitment to study
2. Course objectives
3. Entry requirements
4. Credit for previous studies
5. Course structure
6. The Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications)/Bachelor of Commerce degree
7. The Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications)/Bachelor of Laws degree
8. Honours entry
9. Honours requirements
    9.1. Pure honours
    9.2. Combined honours
    9.3. Honours subjects
10. Further study
11. Career opportunities
12. Further information
Subject Lists
    First-year subjects
    Second/third-year subjects
    Third-year subjects
    Fourth-year subjects


This area of study is only available to students enrolled in the Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications) program or the Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications) Honours program.

The Media and Communications Program is an exciting Bachelor of Arts stream designed to provide students with optimal access to the globally expanding world of media and new communication technologies and to future postgraduate study and research.

The program is deliberately interdisciplinary in nature and offers a distinctive blend of academic study and media-relevant practice delivered by internationally recognized scholars and experienced industry professionals. By this means students can determine pathways to a wide range of media-related careers and opportunities and/or prepare a foundation for later postgraduate study and advanced research. Possible careers in Media and Communications today include print, broadcasting and on-line journalism, advertising and public relations, publishing and editing, corporate and government communications, as well as diverse opportunities in the entertainment and information industries more generally.

Our courses represent the latest thinking and research in the international field of scholarship and students select core and optional subjects from a wide range of subjects according to their own interests and career trajectories. Subjects offered include, amongst many others, Net Communications; Media Futures and New Technologies; Politics, Communication, Media; Marketing Communications; Professional Writing; Advanced Writing; Writing Journalism; Asia-Pacific Media Systems; Global Media Cultures, Understanding Australian Media; and Media Law.

Hands-on media industry experience and project-based research is also available through our popular internships and the final research project. We study Media and Communications as interrelated global-local processes comprising media institutions and communication technologies, media representations and texts, and media audiences and processes of reception, and we situate these in relation to social, political and cultural contexts and historical dynamics of change. Students are encouraged to develop their critical understanding of the changing nature and role(s) of Media and Communications in today's 'mediatised' societies as well as develop practical skills and research aptitudes of use to them in their future careers within today's rapidly changing global media environment.

1. Time commitment to study

As well as scheduled contact hours for lectures, tutorial and seminars a considerable additional time commitment is needed to complete the academic requirements of each subject.

A subject-specific time commitment to study will be provided by your lecturer or tutor at the beginning of semester to help you schedule your workload and successfully manage your time during the semester. In addition, general estimates of the total time commitment required to study a 12.5-point single semester subject in the Faculty of Arts can be found on Time commitment to study.

2. Course objectives

The Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications) has as its objectives that graduates:

3. Entry requirements

The BA (Media and Communications) commences at first year. The degree is subject to quotas and selection will be based on academic achievement. Work experience is not taken into consideration in the selection process.

Media and Communications undergraduate compulsory and core subjects are not available to Bachelor of Arts, CAP, complementary studies, or Bachelor of Letters students.

4. Credit for previous studies

Students applying to transfer from a Bachelor of Arts degree into the BA (Media and Communications) who have successfully completed arts and/or optional subjects may apply for a maximum of 150 points of credit. However, no credit will be granted for core Media and Communications subjects, which all students are expected to complete as an enrolled student within the program. Credit is subject to Faculty approval and is assessed on a case by case basis.

Students transferring from other faculties or tertiary institutions may apply for a maximum of 150 points of credit distributed across first and second year. No credit will be granted for core Media and Communications subjects. Credit is subject to Faculty approval and is assessed on a case by case basis. To be granted credit for arts and optional subjects previous study must be deemed to have equivalent content and assessment.

5. Course structure

The BA (Media and Communications) is a three-year full-time program, comprising 100 points at each of first, second, and third-year levels, for a total of 300 points.

In the first year students complete two compulsory subjects (25 points), two subjects from a list of optional first-year subjects (25 points), and 50 points of additional study from the Bachelor of Arts degree. Students in the BA (Media and Communications) are restricted to 100 points at first year level, and may not enrol in any further first-year subjects after completing first year requirements.

Upon entering second year, students choose between two streams of major study:

Repeating a failed subject:

If you fail a subject, you will be required either to repeat the failed subject, or to complete an equivalent subject at the same year level (or higher) in order to complete your degree.

You can not enrol in a subject if you have attempted it twice before. This means that if you fail a compulsory subject in the Media and Communications program twice, you will not be able to complete the degree. In such circumstances, you will be required to discontinue your studies.

First year
Students complete subjects totalling 100 points which must include the following compulsory subjects;Semester
 100-100 Introduction to Media and Communications1, repeat 2
 100-101 Professional Writing1, repeat 2
and two of the following optional subjects;
 103-100 Working with New Media1
 106-101 Contemporary Culture and Media1
 106-106 Contemporary Culture and Everyday Life2
 106-186 Creative Writing: Autofictions2
 107-132 Introduction to Hollywood & Art Cinema1
 107-133 Introduction to Film Theory2
 110-118 Language and Power in Asian Societies1
 131-145 USA Today: Society, Culture, Identity1
 131-153 Age of Revolution: French Revolution2
 131-154 The Modern World 1: The Nuclear Shadow1
 131-155 The Modern World 2: People Power2
 136-103 The Good Life and Science2
 166-103 Global Politics2
 166-107 Media, Politics and Society1
 166-108 Contemporary Ideologies & Movements1
 175-105 Introduction to Language1
 175-108 Cross-Cultural Communication2
 175-134 Project Based Communication1, repeat 2
 and four subjects (50 points) of first-year subjects from those available within the arts degree. 
Second year
Students complete eight subjects (totalling 100 points).Semester
 Enriched major students must complete four of the following core subjects. 
 Double major students must complete two of the following core subjects in combination with a major in another arts discipline. 
 Core subjects: 
 100-203 Global Media Cultures1
 100-204 Media and Communications Theory2
 100-205 Writing Journalism1
 100-206 Net Communications1
 100-207 Asia-Pacific Media Systems2
 100-208 Politics, Communication, Media1
 100-220 Marketing Communications2
 100-221 Media Futures and New Technologies2
 100-222 Understanding Australian Media2
 100-223 Media Law2
and
 Enriched major students must complete four second/third-year optional subjects, see Course structure 
 Double major students must complete two second/third-year optional subjects below in combination with a major in another arts discipline. 
Third year
Students must complete subjects totalling 100 points.Semester
 Enriched major students must complete: 
 100-310 Media and Communications Internship (students who wish to enrol in an internship must attend a compulsory information session in August of the year before their enrolment. Applications for both semesters must be submitted in September of the year before the intended internship, late applications will not be accepted)1, repeat 2
 100-311 Media & Communications Research Project1, repeat 2
 two of the following core subjects below and two second/third-year optional subjects below. 
 or 
 100-311 Media & Communications Research Project1, repeat 2
 three of the following core subjects below and three second/third year optional subjects below; 
 Double major students must complete: 
 two core subjects below in combination with a major in another arts area of study; 
 and 
 two second/third-year optional subjects in combination with a major in another area of study. 
 Core subjects: 
 100-203 Global Media Cultures1
 100-204 Media and Communications Theory2
 100-205 Writing Journalism1
 100-206 Net Communications1
 100-207 Asia-Pacific Media Systems2
 100-208 Politics, Communication, Media1
 100-220 Marketing Communications2
 100-221 Media Futures and New Technologies2
 100-222 Understanding Australian Media2
 100-223 Media Law2
 100-312 Advanced Writing2
Second/third-year optional subjects (some optional subjects have specific prerequisites that must be met)
Australian studiesSemester
 102-003 Australia and America1, repeat 2
 102-206 Witness: War and the Australian Media1
 102-211 Migrant Nation: Culture and Identity1
 102-213 Face, Place, Race: Images of Australia2
Cinema studies
 107-077 Television and Australian Culture1
 107-078 Italian National CinemasNot Offered
 107-079 Feminist Film and Television TheoryNot Offered
 107-081 Genre Study2
 107-082 The Entertainment ExperienceNot Offered
 107-083 Film Noir: Style and History2
 107-087 Contemporary Australian Cinema2
 107-238 Exiles: Diaspora and European CinemaNot Offered
 107-239 Rebel Screen: 1960s ProjectionsNot Offered
 107-258 Game StudiesNot Offered
 107-269 The Musical: From Hollywood to BollywoodNot Offered
 107-270 The 1950s: Film, Perfection & PropagandaNot Offered
 107-271 Media Matrix: Film, Media and MoralityNot Offered
Computer applications in the social sciences and humanities
 103-002 Internet Applications2
 103-006 Multimedia Authoring2
 103-202 Internet Applications: IntensiveSummer
Creative writing
 106-025 Creative Writing 2: Across the Genres1
 106-027 Writing Scripts2
 106-062 Writing Literary Non-FictionNot Offered
 106-212 Principles of Editing and Publishing2
English and cultural studies
 106-003 Media and Cultural DifferenceNot Offered
 106-012 Television CulturesNot Offered
 106-014 Hong Kong CinemaNot Offered
 106-032 Novel and Film1
 106-036 Postmodernism1
 106-045 Aboriginal Writing2
 106-046 Australia and the Colonial Imaginary2
 106-047 Art/Pornography/Blasphemy/Propaganda2
 106-050 Australian Authorship2
 106-055 CyberculturesNot Offered
 106-063 Aboriginal Cultural Studies1
 106-064 Contemporary Cultural Studies1
 106-203 Sports, Entertainment and the Media2
History
 131-051 Aboriginal & Pacific Islander Histories2
 131-062 Making China Modern1
 131-071 Museums, Objects, Spectacles1
 131-223 Making News: Making Histories1
 131-225 Terrorism in Modern Conflict2
 131-228 Inventing Asian Traditions1
 131-236 The USA & the World:Democracy and Empire1
 131-242 Marvellous Melbourne: A Cultural History1
Indonesian studies
 110-218 Mass Media in Indonesia1
 110-419 Popular Cultures in Indonesia (at third-year level)Not Offered
Linguistics and applied linguistics
 175-020 Language & CultureNot Offered
 175-200 Language and Media1
 175-202 Computer Mediated Communication2
 175-210 Business and Management Writing1
Political science
 166-004 Change & Conflict in Australian SocietyNot Offered
 166-014 Asia Pacific International Politics2
 166-017 West European Politics2
 166-018 Chinese Politics and Society1
 166-021 International Relations and its Others2
 166-022 Public Policy Making1
 166-029 Global Politics: Key Questions2
 166-035 Australian Foreign Relations1
 166-218 Colonial/Postcolonial S.E.Asian PoliticsNot Offered
 166-210 Political Communication2
Sociology
 166-209 Cyberspace: The Last Frontier?2

6. The Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications)/Bachelor of Commerce degree

Students must complete a minimum of 225 Arts (Media and Communications) points which must include:

For the enriched major stream:

For the double major stream:

Students must complete a minimum 200 commerce points, which must include:

Compulsory subjects in the Bachelor of Commerce:

The remaining 37.5 points may be taken from subjects available to students enrolled in the Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Commerce combined degree.

* Students who commenced the Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications) / Bachelor of Commerce degree prior to 2005 are not required to complete this subject.

7. The Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications)/Bachelor of Laws degree

This degree is only available with an enriched major stream.

Students must complete a minimum of 200 arts (Media and Communications) points which must include:

Students must also complete a minimum 300 law points.

8. Honours entry

The prerequisites for entry to fourth-year honours in Media and Communications are:

For information on how to apply see Applying for Honours.

9. Honours requirements

Honours coordinator: Dr Umi Manickam-Khattab

Honours in Media and Communications comprises two streams:

9.1. Pure honours

Students undertaking the pure honours stream complete:

9.2. Combined honours

Double major students complete one of the following combined honours streams:

or

Please note: students undertaking the second option will graduate with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) NOT a Bachelor of Arts (Media and Communications Honours).

9.3. Honours subjects

Core subjects
 100-415 Journalism: Conflict and Society1
 100-416 Researching Audiences and Reception1
 100-417 Media and Everyday Life1
 100-418 Media Policy and Regulation1
 100-419 Public Relations and Corporate Power2
 100-420 Journalism: Practice and Theory2
Thesis subject
 100-581 Media and Communications Thesis1, repeat 2
Optional subjects
 106-402 Cultural Policy and Power1
 106-404 Memory and Contemporary Culture2
 106-409 Stardom, Media, Culture1
 106-428 Media, Politics and Cultural DiasporaNot Offered
 106-444 Global Culture: History and TheoryNot Offered
 106-474 The Contemporary Publishing Industry1
 106-475 Business and Professional Communications1
 106-475 Business and Professional Communications1
 107-409 Indigenous Photography, New Media, FilmNot Offered
 107-421 Contemporary Film Theory1
 107-429 Ethnographic and Documentary Cinema2
 110-431 Literature & Film in Contemporary China1
 121-545 Understanding Development1
 131-545 Writing and Making Histories1
 131-551 Representations of Gender2
 166-444 The Emerging World (Dis)Order1
 166-455 Managing Communications & the Media1
 166-485 Contemporary Sociological Theory1
 106-474 The Contemporary Publishing Industry1
 106-475 Business and Professional Communications1
 106-477 Writing and Editing for Digital Media2

10. Further study

The Media and Communications Program offers a range of postgraduate coursework and research programs: Postgraduate Certificate in Arts (Media and Communications), Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Media and Communications), one and two-year Master of Arts (Global Journalism) and Master of Arts (Global Media Communication), Master of Arts in Media Communication (advanced seminar and shorter thesis), Master of Arts in Media Communication (thesis only) and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD). Details of these programs are available in the University's on-line postgraduate course guide and from the Media and Communications program.

11. Career opportunities

The BA (Media and Communications) is designed to facilitate students' entry into the dynamic and expanding Media and Communications sectors of Australia and the Asia-Pacific region. The degree is a pathway into careers in print and on-line journalism, multimedia, public relations, corporate and government communication, advertising, film, television and broadcasting, lobbying and consultancy, media policy, research and management, and the information and entertainment industries more generally.

12. Further information

Media and Communications Program
School of Culture and Communication
Second Floor, John Medley Building
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
Tel: +61 3 8344 5506/7/8
Web: http://www.mediacomm.unimelb.edu.au

or

Faculty of Arts
Old Arts Building
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
International enquiries:
Email: arts-international@unimelb.edu.au
Web: http://www.arts.unimelb.edu.au/international

First-year subjects

100-100 Introduction to Media and Communications
100-101 Professional Writing

Second/third-year subjects

100-203 Global Media Cultures
100-204 Media and Communications Theory
100-205 Writing Journalism
100-206 Net Communications
100-207 Asia-Pacific Media Systems
100-208 Politics, Communication, Media
100-220 Marketing Communications
100-221 Media Futures and New Technologies
100-222 Understanding Australian Media
100-223 Media Law

Third-year subjects

100-310 Media and Communications Internship
100-311 Media & Communications Research Project
100-312 Advanced Writing

Fourth-year subjects

100-581 Media and Communications Thesis
100-415 Journalism: Conflict and Society
100-416 Researching Audiences and Reception
100-417 Media and Everyday Life
100-418 Media Policy and Regulation
100-419 Public Relations and Corporate Power
100-420 Journalism: Practice and Theory
100-421 Media and Communications Internship



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