Arts, Sciences, and Engineering Art & Art History-Art History
Course Section Listing Course Course Title Term Credits Status
COURSE_SECTION-3-164923 AHST 102-1 Intro to Media Studies Spring 2024 4.0 Open
Schedule:
Day Begin End Location Start Date End Date
TR 1230 PM 145 PM Meliora Room 203 01/17/2024 05/11/2024
Enrollment: Enrolled     
63
Capacity     
70
Co-Located: AHST 102-1 (P), ENGL 118-1, FMST 131-1
Instructors: Joel Burges
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Description: This course introduces students to the theory and practice of media studies. We will look at a range of both media and historical tendencies related to the media, including manuscript culture, print, and the rise of the newspaper, novel, and modern nation-state; photography, film, television and their respective differences as visual mediums; important shifts in attitudes towards painting; the place of sound in the media of modernity; and the computerization of culture brought about by the computer, social networks, video games, and cell phones. In looking at these, we will consider both the approaches that key scholars in the field of media studies use, and the concepts that are central to the field itself (media/medium; medium-specificity; remediation; the culture industry; reification and utopia; cultural politics). By the end of the class, students will have developed a toolkit for understanding, analyzing, and judging the media that shape their lives in late modernity.
Offered: Fall Spring Summer

Course Section Listing Course Course Title Term Credits Status
COURSE_SECTION-3-144866 AHST 102-1 Intro to Media Studies Spring 2023 4.0 Open
Schedule:
Day Begin End Location Start Date End Date
TR 1230 PM 145 PM Meliora Room 203 01/11/2023 05/06/2023
Enrollment: Enrolled     
59
Capacity     
64
Co-Located: AHST 102-1 (P), ENGL 118-1, FMST 131-1
Instructors: Joel Burges
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Description: This course introduces students to the theory and practice of media studies. We will look at a range of both media and historical tendencies related to the media, including manuscript culture, print, and the rise of the newspaper, novel, and modern nation-state; photography, film, television and their respective differences as visual mediums; important shifts in attitudes towards painting; the place of sound in the media of modernity; and the computerization of culture brought about by the computer, social networks, video games, and cell phones. In looking at these, we will consider both the approaches that key scholars in the field of media studies use, and the concepts that are central to the field itself (media/medium; medium-specificity; remediation; the culture industry; reification and utopia; cultural politics). By the end of the class, students will have developed a toolkit for understanding, analyzing, and judging the media that shape their lives in late modernity.
Offered: Fall Spring Summer