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MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS

This course introduces the student to the history, philosophy, epistemology and analysis of media and mass communication. The class covers social, cultural, and political changes triggered by new media and communication technologies and presents current theory and research models. Students will specifically focus on the implications of the phonetic alphabet, the invention of the printing press, television, and cyberspace and will participate in a mixture of lectures, readings, discussions, experiments and projects.






WEEK 1 - Introduction



History and Definitions of Media and Communications
Barlow, John Perry. Independence Declaration of Cyberspace. (1996)
Speck, Hendrik. Timeline of Media/ Hypermedia. (2001)

Resources
Electronic Frontier Foundation. John Perry Barlow.
Hobbes Internet Timeline.


WEEK 2 - History of Communication Media



Reading
History. Kittler, Friedrich: The History of Communication Media. (1996)


WEEK 3 - History and Definitions



Reading
Writing. Plato Phaedrus. (Begin at: “Shall we discuss the rules of writing …?”)
Bush, Vannemar. As we may think. (1945)
Analysis. Shannon, Claude Elwood. A Mathematical Theory of Communication. (1963)

Resources
Claude Elwood Shannon and Infotheory.
Claude Shannon Orbituary.