Monash University Arts Undergraduate handbook 1995

Copyright © Monash University 1995
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Media, social relations and power

BTHM

Cathy Greenfield and Neil Hanley

Subject value of 2.0 (12 points) .* 2 hours per week (seminar) * First semester * Gippsland * Prerequisites: First degree with a major in mass communications or related discipline(s)

The subject focuses on the social relations of power entailed in and connected to various media (such as television, video, radio, press, other print media, computers, film and photography), and the presentation in these media of different sorts of social and political issues. It covers the distinction between ideology critique and analysis of power; media as social institutions and communications technologies variously connected to other institutions in a social network, rather than `representing' other institutions; concepts of agency, media workers and audiences; policy study as an intellectual framework and current policy issues surrounding communications technologies; media and the government of intercultural relations of power and knowledge. Examples may include media constitutions of politics of race and ethnicity, of class and work, of gender and sexuality; media and election campaigns; and media populism.

Assessment

One essay (7000 words): 75% *.One seminar paper (2000 words): 25%

Prescribed texts

Bell P, Boehringer K and Crofts S Programmed politics: A study of Australian television Sable, 1982

Curran J Media, Power and politics Routledge, 1994



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