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JOHN CABOT UNIVERSITY
COURSE CODE: "COM 311-1"
COURSE NAME: "Digital Media Culture"
SEMESTER & YEAR:
Spring 2019
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SYLLABUS
INSTRUCTOR:
Alberto Micali
EMAIL: [email protected]
HOURS:
TTH 10:00-11:15 AM
TOTAL NO. OF CONTACT HOURS:
45
CREDITS:
3
PREREQUISITES:
Prerequisite: COM 220
OFFICE HOURS:
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COURSE DESCRIPTION:
This course provides students with a number of theoretical approaches to critically assess how digital media function and their expanding and expansive role in contemporary culture. The course further investigates digital media convergence in order to develop a critical lexicon that can both chart its development and engage in intellectual interventions in its use within the transformations occuring in more traditional cultural forms such as television, film, popular music, print, and radio. Special emphasis will be placed on the specific cultural, political, economic, and social issues raised by digital media forms.
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SUMMARY OF COURSE CONTENT:
The course will attempt at first to define the domain
of Digital Media, proposing it as the amalgamation of different traditional
media forms into new digitally based varieties. Subsequently the course will
analyze the various forms which Digital Media has assumed and concentrate on
the specific issues –cultural, political, economic, technological and
social—that the various forms raise.
This is a lecture and discussion course. We will shift
back and forth between discussing theoretical and practical issues in relation
to digital media culture media and their relation to society. Lectures and
discussions will be supported with several multi-media content. Students are
strongly encouraged to propose their own choice of media material for the
class.
Readings include texts by influential media and
cultural thinkers such as: Donna Haraway, Franco Berardi, Manuel Castells,
Gabriella Coleman, Jodi Dean, Lev Manovich, Lawrence Lessig, Geert Lovink.
All reading materials will be distributed in advance
through the class moodle page and will be available in digital format online. Other course material could be handled in class during specific learning activities.
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LEARNING OUTCOMES:
By the end of the course students will be able to:
1. understand and analyze the corresponding influences
that traditional media and digital media are having upon each other.
2. understand and analyze how digital media use
contributes to shape personal identities and social relationships.
3. recognize the influences that digital media is
expressing in the cultural, social, economical and political spheres.
4. learn some key concepts such as digitality,
interactivity, hypertextuality, virtuality, internetworking, mediation and
remediation, web 2.0., digital labor, algorithmic culture, remix culture, hacking
and hacktivism, cybernetics, etc., and apply them to understand contemporary
digital media cultural expressions.
5. advance one’s ability to work in team, critically
analyze contemporary digital societies, and produce qualitative research
reports and reflection papers.
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TEXTBOOK:
Book Title | Author | Publisher | ISBN number | Library Call Number | Comments | Format | Local Bookstore | Online Purchase |
Digital Culture. Expanded Second Edition | Charlie Gere | Reaktion Books 2008 | 978 1 86189 388 8 | | | | | |
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REQUIRED RESERVED READING:
RECOMMENDED RESERVED READING:
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GRADING POLICY
-ASSESSMENT METHODS:
Assignment | Guidelines | Weight |
Attendance and Participation | Class participation consists of your contribution to class discussions and other activities. Students are required to come to class having completed the assigned readings. For attendance policy see below. | 10% |
Participation to 'Digital Delights & Disturbances' lecture series | Students are required to attend at least 3 sessions of the lecture series. A detailed calendar with dates & event description will be provided at the beginning of the semester. | 5% |
Digital Media Piece | Students are required to choose a contemporary example of a digital media phenomenon to serve as the principal focus of research and assignment work throughout the course. | 30% |
Digital Media Piece (Group work) | Students will work in groups (3-4), and topics will be selected from a list. The assignment consists in the production and development of a digital media ‘piece’ (wiki, blog, set of digital images, web page, edition of a digital newspaper, data map, software, video essay, research movie, etc.) to be completed in group, concerning with the phenomenon in question and aligning with the individual skills of each student. | (15%) |
Digital Media Piece (Individual) | Students are required to weekly submit short reflections on the topics, and related readings, that are introduced in class (due on the Sunday evening that ends the week). The relevant ideas, concepts and themes that are studied have to be applied to the research focus, in order to individually progress on its development before the midterm and final assignments. Individual contribution will be assessed with one point per submission for each week of teaching (12; midterm is out; 0.5 for late submissions); three extra points for those who submit 12 reflections. | (15%) |
Midterm Exam: Presentation | In week 7, students will present to peers their midterm reflections and findings on the research project (as well as submitting the midterm development of their digital media ‘piece’). Short presentations will be structured around the group work, and followed by feedback and discussion. These will assist you in the progress of your ideas. | 20% |
Final Research Paper | Students are required to write an individual research paper between 3500-5000 words, following their own engagement in the group research. | 35% |
Final Research Paper (Final Exam: Research Paper Outline Presentation) | The final exam consists in a short presentation of a summary of your individual research paper. | (5%) |
Final Research Paper (Final Submission: Research Paper) | Students have to analyze the chosen phenomenon by applying concepts, concerns and contexts introduced in the course. Papers will be graded according to their clarity, originality, style, adherence to the course topics, coherence of the argument, attention to diversity of sources, correct formatting of citations, ability to develop from feedback and alignment with the group project and its digital media output. | (30%) |
-ASSESSMENT CRITERIA:
AWork of this quality directly addresses the question or problem raised and provides a coherent argument displaying an extensive knowledge of relevant information or content. This type of work demonstrates the ability to critically evaluate concepts and theory and has an element of novelty and originality. There is clear evidence of a significant amount of reading beyond that required for the course. BThis is highly competent level of performance and directly addresses the question or problem raised.There is a demonstration of some ability to critically evaluatetheory and concepts and relate them to practice. Discussions reflect the student’s own arguments and are not simply a repetition of standard lecture andreference material. The work does not suffer from any major errors or omissions and provides evidence of reading beyond the required assignments. CThis is an acceptable level of performance and provides answers that are clear but limited, reflecting the information offered in the lectures and reference readings. DThis level of performances demonstrates that the student lacks a coherent grasp of the material.Important information is omitted and irrelevant points included.In effect, the student has barely done enough to persuade the instructor that s/he should not fail. FThis work fails to show any knowledge or understanding of the issues raised in the question. Most of the material in the answer is irrelevant.
-ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENTS:
ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENTS AND EXAMINATION POLICY
Please note that frequent absences automatically lower your participation grade.
Also please consider that you will lose one half-letter grade for any absence over 4 (e.g. 5 absences, half letter grade lost). Anything above 8 absences will result in failing the course.
If you have a serious health problem, which causes you to miss more classes than this class allows, you can ask the Dean's Office to consider whether you may warrant a exemption from this policy.
If unexcused, students more than 10 minutes late are marked as absent. Late arrival (less than 10 minutes) is marked as such, and 3 late arrivals are counted as one absence.
Class procedure: Use of cell phones affects your participation grade and is strictly forbidden during class. Please make sure that your cell phone is turned off (and not just muted) when class starts.
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ACADEMIC HONESTY
As stated in the university catalog, any student who commits an act of academic
dishonesty will receive a failing grade on the work in which the dishonesty occurred.
In addition, acts of academic dishonesty, irrespective of the weight of the assignment,
may result in the student receiving a failing grade in the course. Instances of
academic dishonesty will be reported to the Dean of Academic Affairs. A student
who is reported twice for academic dishonesty is subject to summary dismissal from
the University. In such a case, the Academic Council will then make a recommendation
to the President, who will make the final decision.
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STUDENTS WITH LEARNING OR OTHER DISABILITIES
John Cabot University does not discriminate on the basis of disability or handicap.
Students with approved accommodations must inform their professors at the beginning
of the term. Please see the website for the complete policy.
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SCHEDULE
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Week 1 - Introduction and
Course Overview: Digital | Media | Culture
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1. What are
digital media? What is culture? Can we speak of a distinctive ‘digital
culture’?
Reading:
Gere, C. (2008) ‘What is digital culture?’, Introduction,
Digital Culture, London: Reaktion
Books; pp. 11-20.
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SECTION 1: Studying and defining digital media
cultures
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Week 2 How to: Theorizing
and studying digital media cultures
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2. The
‘practice’ of theory: the critical study of digital media
Readings:
Mills B., and Barlow D. M. (2009) ‘What is Theory’,
Chapter 2, Reading Media Theory:
Thinkers, Approaches and Contexts, London: Routledge; pp. 7-21.
Kearney, M. C. (2018) ‘Introduction, or how to cook
an artichoke’, Introduction in Kackman, M. and Kearney, M. C. (eds.) The Craft of Criticism. Critical Media
Studies in Practice, New York – London: Routledge; pp. 1-8.
Suggested Reading:
Merrin, W. (2009) ‘Media Studies 2.0: upgrading and
open-sourcing the discipline’, Interactions:
Studies in Communication and Culture, 1 (1), pp. 17-34.
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Week 3 Features and Defining
Concepts
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3. Digital
media: defining concepts I
Readings:
Lister, M., Dovey, J., Giddings, S., Grant, I., and
Kelly, K. (2009) ‘1.2 The characteristics of new media: some defining
concepts’, New Media. A Critical
Introduction. 2nd edition. London and New York: Routledge; pp.13-44.
Manovich, L. (2002) The Language of New Media, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; selected
extracts.
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Week 4 Features and Defining
Concepts
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4. Digital
media: defining concepts II
Readings:
Bolter, J. and Grusin, R. (1999) Remediation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press;
selected extracts.
Manovich, L. (2013) Software Takes Command. New York – London: Bloomsbury; selected extracts.
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SECTION 2: Histories of the Digital
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Week 5 The Beginnings of
Digital Cultures
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5. Histories of
the Digital I
Readings:
Gere, C. (2008) ‘The Beginnings of Digital Culture’,
Chapter 1, Digital Culture, London:
Reaktion Books; pp. 21-50.
Castells, M. (1996) ‘The Information Technology
Revolution’, Chapter 2, The Rise of the
Network Society (Second Edition, 2010), Malden: MA – Oxford: Blackwell;
pp. 28-69.
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Week 6 The Rise of the
Digital
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6. Histories of
the Digital II
Readings:
Curran, J. (2012) ‘Rethinking internet history’,
Chapter 2, in Curran, J., Fenton, N. and Freedman, D. (eds.) Misunderstanding the Internet, London
– New York: Routledge; pp.34-65.
Van Dijck, J. (2009) The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media. Oxford
– New York: Oxford University Press; selected extracts.
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Week 7 Group Presentations
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Week 8 Digital Everywhere
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8. Histories of
the Digital III
Readings:
Jenkins, H. (2006) Convergence Culture. Where Old and New Media Collide. New York –
London: New York University Press; selected extracts.
Lovink, G. (2016) ‘On the Social Media Ideology’,
E-Flux, 75, September; Available from: http://worker01.e-flux.com/pdf/article_9008964.pdf
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SECTION 3: Digital Societies
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Week 9 Remix Cultures
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9. Digital
Societies I
Reading:
Lessig, L. (2008) Remix. Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy.
London: Bloomsbury; selected extracts.
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Week 10 Hacker Cultures
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10. Digital
Societies II
Readings:
Coleman, G. (2013) ‘Introduction: A Tale of Two
Worlds’, in Coding Freedom, Princeton: Princeton University Press; selected
extracts.
Stallman, R. (2010) Free Software, Free Society:
Selected Essays of Richard M. Stallman, 2nd edition. Boston: Free Software
Foundation; selected extracts.
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Week 11 Cyborg Cultures
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11. Digital
Societies III
Readings:
Haraway, D. (1991) ‘A Cyborg Manifesto: Science,
Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century’, Chapter 8,
Simians, Cyborgs, and Women. The
Reinvention of Nature, New York: Routledge; selected extracts.
Miller, V. (2011) ‘The Body and Information
Technology’, Chapter 9, Understanding
Digital Culture, London – Thousand Oaks – New Delhi – Singapore: Sage;
pp. 207-223.
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SECTION 4: Digital Politics
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Week 12 Digital Media
Politics
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12. Politics of
the Digital I
Readings:
Dean, J. (2009) Democracy
and other Neoliberal Fantasies. Communicative Capitalism and Left Politics.
Durham – Lodnon: Duke University Press; selected extracts.
Berardi, F. (2009) ‘The Soul at Work’, Chapter 2, The Soul at Work. From Alienation to Autonomy,
Los Angeles: Semiotext(e); pp. 74-105.
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Week 13 Digital Media
Politics
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13. Politics of
the Digital II
Readings:
Hands, J. (2011) @
is for Activism. London: Pluto Press; selected extracts.
Beer, D. (2009) ‘Power through the algorithm? Participatory
web cultures and the technological unconscious’, New Media & Society, 11(6), pp. 985-1002.
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Week 14 Recap of Main
Concepts and Final Group Projects Overview
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