Global Media and Communication

Curriculum Guideline

Effective Date:
Course
Discontinued
No
Course Code
CMNS 2200
Descriptive
Global Media and Communication
Department
Communications
Faculty
Language, Literature & Performing Arts
Credits
3.00
Start Date
End Term
201910
PLAR
No
Semester Length
15 weeks
Max Class Size
35
Contact Hours
4 hours per week
Method(s) Of Instruction
Lecture
Seminar
Learning Activities

Some or all of the folowing methods will be used:

  • Lecture/seminar
  • Media (including video and documentary film)
  • Discussion of class readings and materials
  • Student-provided materials
Course Description
This course offers a comprehensive look at the trends and challenges in global media and communication. Students will learn how to use analytical tools to theorize globalization and its processes in the context of prominent historical events. Students will also focus on the shifting trends in the global media landscape in the news, film, and television industries.
Course Content

This course will cover selected key concepts from the following topics:

Globalization: Definitions and Debates

  • Theorizing Globalization
  • Global Transformations: Politics, Economics, and Culture

Perspectives in Global Media and Communication

  • Propaganda and Realism
  • The Cold War and Liberalism
  • The Global Communication Order and Critical Theory
  • Cultural Imperialism and Postcolonial Studies
  • Global Media and Hybrid Cultures
    • Cultural Influences from Around the Globe
    • Canada vs the US: A Struggle for Cultural Identity
  • Shifts in the Political, Economic and Cultural Landscape
Learning Outcomes

Students who successfully complete this course will

  1. Develop an understanding of the major trends and challenges in global media and communication
  2. Identify appropriate theoretical frameworks by which to assess global media
  3. Apply these communication theories to an analysis of the global communication order
  4. Evaluate critically changes in the communication order over time as competing global media influences emerge
  5. Situate the changing cultural landscape within a broader shift in global power relations
Means of Assessment

Students will be assessed using a variety of evaluations, such as

Case Study – 20%

Midterm Exam – 30%

Research Paper – 30%

Research Paper Presentation – 10%

Attendance and Participation – 10%

Total - 100%

Textbook Materials

An instructor-compiled coursepack and a course textbook in current edition, such as one of the following:

Daya Thussu (Ed.), International Communication: A Reader

Daya Thussu, International Communication: Continuity and Change

David Held and Anthony McGrew (Eds.), The Global Transformations Reader: An Introduction to the Globalization Debate

Prerequisites

CMNS 1221 Introduction to Media and Communication Studies

OR

CMNS 1223 New Media and Society

Corequisites

None

Equivalencies

None

Which Prerequisite

None