1 / 41

CMNS 130

CMNS 130. Explorations in Mass Communication: Issues and Controversies Catherine Murray. Agenda. Course Introduction & Expectations The Writing Assignments The Logic of Course Design Introductory Lecture What is Mass Communication?. Course Team. Xinren Li Carolyn Liu Sherry Yu

lyn
Download Presentation

CMNS 130

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CMNS 130 Explorations in Mass Communication: Issues and Controversies Catherine Murray CMNS 130

  2. Agenda • Course Introduction & Expectations • The Writing Assignments • The Logic of Course Design • Introductory Lecture • What is Mass Communication? CMNS 130

  3. Course Team • Xinren Li • Carolyn Liu • Sherry Yu • Heather Fleming • Tara McFarlane (Writing Intensive Learning Office:LIDC) CMNS 130

  4. Course Support • www.sfu.ca/cmns/faculty/murray_c/ • Click on current courses CMNS 130 CMNS 130

  5. CMNS 130 Course Objectives • To provide a map to navigate the field of communication studies • history & political economy • Society and technology • To identify different perspectives on contemporary controversies • To teach the design of effective arguments in academic writing in this discipline CMNS 130

  6. CMNS 130 • A gatekeeping course for majors • Leads to a range of courses which study the *institutions of the media • *institution: • A relationship or behavioral pattern of importance in the life of a community or society • An ever-present feature • An enduring organization, or set of organizations bound formally or informally by rules • See custom courseware, page 40 CMNS 130

  7. Protocol for lectures • Attend often • Read before • Switch off cell phones • Use laptops for notes only • ASK questions or take notes of questions to ask your TA • This is a cumulative course: understand a unit before you move on CMNS 130

  8. Lecture & Tutorial Support Outline for lectures available midnight Wednesday • Download and Use outline as a guide to your own note taking in class • Lectures are audiotaped and available in library • READ before lecture • Tutorials • Attend each tutorial • Participate in debate • Writing assignments: total 5 • ONE FINAL EXAM • Workshop for final exam available CMNS 130

  9. Guide to Writing • See Guidelines for Writing Assignments Spring 2007 • Consult Margaret Northey et al. 2005. Making Sense: A Student’s Guide to Research and Writing. 2nd edition. Oxford University Press. • Use the style manual used in the Canadian Journal of Communication CMNS 130

  10. Writing Assignments • Two due in Tutorial: • Date to be assigned • 10% each • length: 350-500 words • Article Analysis • due Feb 1,2007 • 15% • Length: 750 words ( 3 pages) CMNS 130

  11. Writing Assignments Cont’d • Major Course Essay • Due March 15, 2007 • 25% • Length 2,000-3,000 words or 8-12 pages /space and a half • Creative Public Commentary • Due March 29, 2007 • 10% • 150 words CMNS 130

  12. DAIE for Course Skills Develop the Four stages of critical thinking and academic writing : • Description • Analysis, Framing of Arguments and Proof • Interpretation & Debate • Evaluation/Originality CMNS 130

  13. The Alchemy of Grades • Description • C+ • Basic facts mastered and patterned • Analysis • B range • Meaning of patterns probed, knowledge applied. Hierarchy of patterning proofs • Interpretation • High B to A- • Comparisons and analogies. Judgement. Argument and Illustration. • Evaluation • A-A+ range • Values. Understanding • If creative originality or thought leadership an A plus • TIP: GUIDE YOUR EDITING BY THE MARKING RUBRIC WITH EACH ASSIGNMENT CMNS 130

  14. Course Writing Assignments • Frame arguments • Organize proofs • Write persuasively • Develop a unique expressive voice CMNS 130

  15. The Logic of the Course Design • Definitions & Disciplinary Distinctions • Technology and History • Ideology & Propaganda • Law and Policy • Economics & Labour Processes • Culture & Symbols • Issues & Interests • Positions and Debates CMNS 130

  16. STUDY QUESTIONS FOR THIS WEEK • What is the main theme for CMNS 130? • Watch for 4 key definitions • What is the transmission model of communication? How does it differ from the cultural model? CMNS 130

  17. The Big Picture • Communication is a battleground of power • Harold Adams Innis: Empire of Communication • If knowledge is power, it becomes power only through communication • Historically, allied with religious, or secular state powers and now business corporations • Central to institutions of democracy and capitalism • 130 outlines how media work, how they are shaped by and shaping the economic, political and social worlds around us • Do the media create critical citizens or passive consumers? CMNS 130

  18. Themes of CMNS 130 • Propaganda& Persuasion is increasing • Citizens need to understand power over communication and its hidden techniques of control • Battles are between : • Censorship and Freedom of Expression • State and Market control • Information and Propaganda • Empowerment and Enslavement • Frequently, at the expense of the citizen • Learn to decode the democratic deficit • Make the case for democratic communication CMNS 130

  19. Recent Issues & Controversies • Globally: • Danish papers right to publish cartoons of Mohammed • Embargoed cell phone pictures of the hanging of Saddam Hussein • Italian print media voluntarily restrict pictures of underweight models CMNS 130

  20. Issues and Controversies Cont’d • In Canada • Protests over application to import CCTV in Canada • Licensing of Al Jazeera for importation in Canada if broadcast is previewed for compliance with hate laws • Local Surrey radio station plays a role in holding town hall meetings about violence against women in the South Asian Community CMNS 130

  21. The Paradox of Mass Communication • Never more apparent choice • 500 channels, podcasts, blogs and Youtube • Never over larger space, or shorter times, more convenient to the user • Yet never more social controversy over morals and political impacts on human security, democracy and intercultural understanding CMNS 130

  22. The Policy Conundrum • Pendulum of power has swung away from direct state regulation of the economic structure or technology: rise of media behemoths, challenges ( eg Mp3s) • But, a time of ‘war on terror’ which excuses state control of information on a scale not seen since the major world wars CMNS 130

  23. Key Concepts • Definitions of: • Communication • Mass Communication • Media • Two models of the Communication Process CMNS 130

  24. The Definition of Communication • From Latin Communicare • Verb: to share, impart, to make meaning common • To give or receive information,entertainment,signals, messages in any way • Using talk, gestures, writing or other means • Everyday Definition: • “ a meaningful exchange of information” CMNS 130

  25. Origins of Communication • Part of human search to transcend time and space • One of the oldest of human practices: • Essential for social survival, economic organization • Formal study rooted in classical politics from times of Ancient Greece and Rome under a different title: rhetoric, literary criticism, persuasion (humanities) • Development of the study of Mass Communication allied with rise of social sciences and mass marketing after WW2( social science influence) CMNS 130

  26. Mass Communication • Communication from • one person, group or institution • through a transmission system or medium • to large audiences or markets • which are dispersed, anonymous and unknown to each other • Usually on a very large scale • Often heterogenous • READING REFERENCE: MCQUAIL PAGE 9 CUSTOM COURSEWARE • ANALYTIC NOTE: SOMETIMES ASSOCIATED WITH A MASS SOCIETY CRITIQUE OF ALIENATION CC:10 CMNS 130

  27. Medium Defined • Something intermediate • A middle state • An intervening thing through which something( an act or effect) is produced • CC:14 • Colloquial: an intermediary mediates, translates, intercedes between adversaries CMNS 130

  28. Key Characteristics • From one (or few) to many • Implies concept of gatekeeper: controller of transmission/message design • Implies concept of effectiveness and efficiency: is messaging achieving what it intended? CMNS 130

  29. Media • The social or market institution that enables communication to take place • More specifically, a technological development (eg. Sound recording, photograph, telegraph) that extends the channels, range or speed of communication • STUDY AID AND SOURCE: KEY CONCEPTS IN COMMUNICATIONS AND CULTURAL STUDIES ( 2ND ED.). CMNS 130

  30. The Mass Media • Books • Newpapers • Magazines • Sound Recording • Radio • Film • TV • Videogames CMNS 130

  31. The Shapers of the Mass Media • States and Regulators • Economic owners and controllers of the Media • Creators and Analysts of the Media • Audiences/Citizens and Consumers CMNS 130

  32. Characteristics of Mass Communication • Message produced in complex organizations ( sender) • Formally constituted institutions • Rule based • With ‘specialist’ vocations/professions • Message fixed in some form with information and symbolic content ( technology of delivery is either in digital bits or commodity form) (material) • Message is sent/transmitted or diffused widely via a technological medium • Newspaper, magazine, CD or videocassette, radio, television, satellite or Internet • Message is delivered rapidly over great space • Message reaches large groups of different people simultaneously or within a short period of time( mass audience of receivers) • Message is primarily one-way, not two way, although this is now being challenged at the margins • STUDY AID: COMPARE AGAINST TABLE 2.1 PAGE 14 CC CMNS 130

  33. Transformation of ‘Mass’ Communication • Arrival of computers and switched two-way interactive technology …digitization • Internet • From one to many to one to one … from many to many--almost infinitely • Rise of transactional media ( pay per bit) • Resistance of media piracy: swapping and downloading CMNS 130

  34. Transmission Model of Communication • Sender› Message› Receiver • Based on Harold Lasswell’s model in the discipline of political science in the US( 1948) • Helps identify the stages through which communication passes so each one can be properly studied • Modern models recognize process is more complex, no longer one way and there is more interaction and feedback between sender and receiver CMNS 130

  35. Transmission Model II • Central Questions: • Who says what to whom with what effect? ( transmission model) • Useful in early study of propaganda, and advertising ( stimulus response assumption) • Sees mass communication as a process of transmitting intentional messages for the purpose of changing behavior, persuading, social control, or marketing • Implies the study of gatekeepers, symbolic producers, contents, dissemination, trade and impacts CMNS 130

  36. A Different Approach: the Cultural Model • The Media Encode meaning-----Decode meaning • Involves Creation of the Text, design of the sign, symbol or codes and interpretation • But NOT synonymous with the wider idea of popular culture • Communication is much more than message exchange.. The enrichment that communication brings in terms of culture, cohesion and connectedness is widely acknowledged. • Communication unlocks the ideas of a culture • Intimately tied up everyday existence CMNS 130

  37. Cultural Model II • Central Question: • How does communication construct a map of meaning for people in everyday life? (cultural model) • How do people negotiate common meaning and remain bound by it? • Starts from the assumption that: Any attempt to understand the power of the media requires us first to understand how these products are located within and work to construct meaning in everyday life (Grossberg et al, p. 237). • Embraces ideology/belief systems and ritual: mass communication is the representation of shared beliefs where ‘reality’ is produced maintained, repaired and transformed CMNS 130

  38. Transmission Model tends to focus on things, structures Derived from transportation (CC:42) Analytic: rational & linear Focus on Gatekeepers, Owners, Professionals Objective: focus on players, things, interests Cultural Model Tends to focus on humans, processes Derived from linguistics/humanities tradition Holistic: irrational & nonlinear Focus on receivers, audience Ideology/meaning is central so subjective, often critical Differences between the Two models CMNS 130

  39. Implications of the Two models CMNS 130

  40. How different authors bridge the two • Lorimer and Gasher ( reading one) combine them: • Mass communication is the transmission and transformation of meaning on a large scale • ( but?) • Grossberg et al(reading two) argue they are complementary • QUOTE FOR THE DAY: • WE LIVE IN A WORLD OF MEDIA BUT NOT IN A MEDIA WORLD ( CUSTOM COURSEWARE: P.37 GROSSBERG ET AL) CMNS 130

  41. Next Week: Media and Modernity • Read • Tutorial: A Survival Guide to 130 so prepare your questions • Tutorial: Introducing Chomsky Assignment( A Propaganda Model of Communication): look up Chomsky bio • TUTORIAL TIP: CUSTOM COURSEWARE PP. 36-38 and 44-45 ARE KEY • WRITING TIP: MEDIUM IS SINGULAR, MEDIA ARE PLURAL CC P. 38 CMNS 130

More Related