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Communications and Media - Fall 2023 Junior

Course # MDIA 3070

6 Credits

Course Description

This course explores how processes of globalization have shaped global media and communications systems. This is done though examining the primary theories surrounding globalization and their applicability and relevance to media and communication systems. The course examines the relevance of globalization theories to media and communications through the lenses of politics, economy, culture and history. It focuses on the ways in which these processes of globalization have affected the media and communications landscape of Asia and the areas of Eastern Europe, the Middle East, India and China. Themes of study include media imperialism, the rise of transnational networks, global media events, global representation and media representation and media policy and regulation at global, regional and national levels.

Course Learning Outcomes

Upon the successful completion of this course, students will be able to:

  • Discuss the key aspects of cultural globalization in relation to the constraints and opportunities this poses for media organizations;
  • Analyze the constraints and opportunities posed by cultural globalization in economic, political and social terms;
  • Explore the ways in which different global media outlets and organizations operate within the context of cultural globalization
  • Explain the role of media and regulation in creating local narratives

Course Assessments and Grading

Item

Weight

Participation and class debate

20%

Case Studies

40%

Essay Plan

10%

Essay

30%

Course # MDIA 3154

6 Credits

Course Description

This course focuses on screen media processes and the practical skills in TV directing, producing, scriptwriting, camera operating and sound production techniques in digital and traditional formats of media production. The preparation, technical, and presentation skills involved in the production of audio-visual content for television and online content delivery are explored. With an emphasis on the fundamental elements of media production for TV, video graphic narratives and discourses that constitute the screen media landscape in Central Asia are practiced. The contextualized TV content production for screen journalism, non-fiction/fiction filmmaking, and digital media will be analyzed. 

Course Learning Outcomes

By the end of the course, the students will be able to:

  • Analyze TV programs in terms of their visual and aural styles.
  • Practice and use audio and visual techniques to create professional quality television productions.
  • Operate TV Studio equipment and devices to gain TV production skills to do professional media content.
  • Apply theoretical, creative, and technical skills to produce content for TV.
  • Explain the technical requirements and professional standards of screen production.
  • Create content that adheres to media ethics guidelines and models media literacy standards.

Course Assessments and Grading

Item 

Weight 

A short video clip 

20% 

A commercial video 

20% 

A video content proposal 

30% 

A video content 

30% 

Course # MDIA 3199E

6 Credits

Course Description

In this course, students will develop an understanding of popular culture and its impact on everyday life. Popular culture offers a way of examining societies, cultural identities and ideologies across time and geography. It also plays a powerful role in shaping societal attitudes, values and ideologies. By “popular culture” we mean not only cultural texts distributed via mass communication networks, but equally the everyday practices and new digital media that give voice to grassroots sentiments. We start by discussing simple but important questions. Why is popular culture so …popular? How do we all use popular culture in our daily lives? What can the story of popular culture tell us about ourselves? Finally, what influence does popular culture have on shaping our perceptions of other countries and nations? The course assist students with the preparation for the senior exegesis for the research based creative projects.

Course Learning Outcomes

By the end of the course, the students will be able to:

  • Apply cultural theories and concepts to explain popular cultural phenomena
  • Examine the historical, social and cultural environments that spawn popular culture products
  • Discuss the relationship between popular culture, society, and cultural politics
  • Analyse inter-Asia and global cultural flows using a multi-disciplinary approach
  • Explain the factors that result in the formation of fan communities
  • Examine the role of popular culture in developing mutual understanding and empathy between different countries

Course Assessments and Grading

Item

Weight

Assignment 1: Participation in On-Line (Moodle) discussion forum (LOs 1-6)

20%

Assignment 2: Research project

30%

Assignment 3: Group project. 

50% 

Course # HUSS 3072E

6 Credits

Course Description

The World Politics is in transition, and it is vividly observed that the modern state and the international system of modern states loom over all our lives. This is true in advanced industrial democracies, developing countries, and in the varied Central Asian context. But what is the state, and how is it organized? Students will learn what states do, and why they sometimes perform their functions effectively, while at other times they perform their functions less effectively. The course will focus on how some states successfully provide security, stability, infrastructure, education, and modernization, whereas others fail to do so. The course also explores the way in which the conditions of globalization, resulting into growing complex interdependence and transnational relations may be impacting states in new ways. This includes to address the daunting questions, like to what extent are states react to challenges and opportunities of global interdependence? What role states see, in response to rise of transnational actors that affect the behavior, autonomy and power of states?

Course Learning Outcomes

At the conclusion of this course, students will be able to:

  • Describe the form(s) and function(s) of the state that distinguish it from other entities
  • Describe how states behave in the international system of states
  • Explore the variety of states in relation to local context and diverse legacies in the context
  • Explain the role legitimacy and norms play in statehood
  • Explore the ways in which states interact with and impact societies
  • Analyse the varied impact of globalisation on states

Course Assessments and Grading

Item 

Weight 

Participation 

 20% 

Oral Presentation 

 30% 

Reaction Papers 

 20% 

Final Paper 

 30% 

Course # MDIA 2129E

6 Credits

Course Description

From everyday accounts of personal experience, news reports, and historiography to literary fiction, feature films, graphic novels, and interactive media, narrative is the most pervasive and influential of all genres. In written and spoken word, in moving and still images and in transmedia storytelling, narratives construct and reflect meaning for individuals, institutions, and communities.
This course explores the types of meanings narratives create and the ways in which they produce meaning and their impact—positive and negative—on our lives. Drawing on narratology and linguistics, theories of media, journalism, advertising, and visual culture, the course investigates narrative across a range of contemporary media and social practices. Together, we will engage critically and creatively with the structure, form, and content of our own narratives and those of others, as we explore the social, cultural and psychological character of this fascinating genre.

Course Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

  • Apply key methodological and conceptual approaches to the analysis of narratives.
  • Identify the communicative purposes of narratives and the technical means with which they are achieved.
  • Produce theoretically grounded critiques of narrative texts.
  • Use media-specific practical skills in storytelling techniques to engage audiences.

Course Assessments and Grading

Item

Weight

Assessment Task 1: Oral Narratives of Personal Experience  

20% 

Assessment Task 2: A Children’s Story 

25% 

Assessment Task 3: Visualising The White Ship 

25%  

Assessment Task 4: Public Service Announcement 

30%