INT2060 - Global cultures, local traditions: Creating and consuming (popular) culture
6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Arts
Offered
Sunway Second semester 2009 (Day)
Synopsis
Consumption (and re-creation) of Jazz in Japan, McDonalds in Madrid and karaoke in Kuala Lumpur are just a few of the examples of transnational cultural flows which are visible the world over. The mass electronic media of cinema, television, and the Internet have speeded up the transnational flow of images of modernity and created local desires to consume cultures originating in distant places. Unit looks at the implications of globalisation for a variety of cultural phenomena, tracing transitions from local to global cultural practices. It looks at specific cases of local consumption of global cultures, including television, video games, popular music, fiction and comics, and the Internet.
Objectives
Students successfully completing this subject should have:
- A deeper knowledge of the concepts of modernity and tradition, and the problems of cultural ownership and authenticity, as epitomized in copyright law
- Acquired knowledge about the challenges to cultural nationalism by transnational cultural flows, and the role of electronic media, especially the Internet in this
- Studied in depth some cases of cultural production and its local consumption, and critically analysed web-based and mass media material relating to these case studies
- Improved their oral skills by participating in tutorial debate, both face-to-face and on-line cross-campus, on specific instances of cultural flows and local identities created through their consumption.
- Improved their written skills by producing a journal (second-year students) or a well-reasoned and well-documented essay on an aspect of the globalisation debate (third-year students).
- Developed independent research skills (third-year students).
- Developed the ability to critically assess the ideological implications of global cultural flows (third-year students).
Assessment
Written work: 55% (2500 words, 2 tasks)
Class tests/quizzes: 20% (1000 words)
Group online discussion project 25% (1500 words)
Contact hours
1 hour lecture and 1 hour tutorial per week
Prerequisites
First year INT sequence or permission