106-009 Media Histories and Cultural Studies

Note

Formerly available as 106-009 Print to Pixels: Cultural Histories. Students who have completed 106-009 Print to Pixels: Cultural Histories are not eligible to enrol in this subject.

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Chris Healy

Prerequisites

Usually fifty points of first year arts including at least 25 points from a specified list of cultural studies approved subject areas.

Semester

Not Offered (view timetable)

Contact

A 1.5-hour lecture and a 1-hour tutorial per week

Subject Description

The subject will explore the intimate connections between media technologies and changing understandings of culture in the 20th century. It focuses on how innovations in print and photographic technologies, telegraphy and telephony, sound recording, radio, film exhibition, TV and video, and the transformation of analogue by digital technologies, have enabled changing visions of culture. It studies terms such as mechanical reproduction and the culture industry, the optical unconscious and trauma, massification and broadcast, public sphere and media literacy, fragmentation and globalisation. Students will be encouraged, and given the confidence, to move between cultural histories and cultural studies. They will be introduced to the histories of key media technologies, and they will examine attempts to theorise the significance and influences of those technologies within cultural studies. As a result students should have, on completion of the subject, a strong critical knowledge of how histories of media technologies are central to contemporary culture.

Generic Skills

  • have advanced research and analysis skills;

  • show critical and ethical self-awareness;

  • have the ability to develop and communicate effective arguments in both oral and written form;

  • develop advanced skills in media and information literacy and management.

Assessment

An essay of 1000 words 25% (due before mid-semester) and a second essay of 3000 words 75% (due at the end of semester). All students will be required to give a formal presentation to one tutorial.

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available from the University Bookshop.



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