TAD3207 - Popular culture and contemporary communication 3A
6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Art and Design
Leader(s): Dr Daniel Palmer
Offered
Caulfield First semester 2009 (Day)
Synopsis
This unit deconstructs the visual language/s of popular culture by exploring the notion that film, television, magazines, fashion, advertising, comics, computer graphics and the internet are amongst the most powerful and persuasive communicators of ideas, attitudes, beliefs and stereotypes in our contemporary world. Using the techniques of semiotics and contemporary theory students learn to interpret and deconstruct the meaning of the various mediums of popular culture.
Objectives
On successful completion of this unit, student will:
- be familiar with the salient ideas and methodologies of semiotics, and how these may contribute to an understanding of art and design;
- be familiar with the salient ideas and differences between structuralist and post-structuralist thought, and be able to make connections between these ideas and art and design practice;
- be able to use semiotics to critically decode and analyse the images and texts of popular culture;
- have an awareness and understanding of the cultural roles and responsibilities of professional communicators in today's society.
Assessment
Research essay (2000 words): 40%
Short analytical essay (1000 words): 30%
One tutorial paper (1000 words): 25%
Class participation: 5%
Contact hours
One 1 hour lecture and one 2 hour tutorial per week
Prerequisites
Must have passed 12 credit points at second year level in Theory of Art and Design, Visual Culture or Cultural Studies
Prohibitions
TAD3217,TAD2207