Global Media and Communication
Curriculum guideline
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
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
Students who successfully complete this course will
- Develop an understanding of the major trends and challenges in global media and communication
- Identify appropriate theoretical frameworks by which to assess global media
- Apply these communication theories to an analysis of the global communication order
- Evaluate critically changes in the communication order over time as competing global media influences emerge
- Situate the changing cultural landscape within a broader shift in global power relations
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%
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
None