 |

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.
|
|
|
Mass and
New Media/ Marshall McLuhan, ArpaNet and
WWW
Book
McLuhan, Marshall. The Medium is the
Message. (Continued) (1964)
Reading
WWW. Berners-Lee, Tim. Information Management:
A Proposal. (1989)
Resources
Arpanet Collection. Internet Archive.
W3C. HTTP Protocol 1.0.
|
|
 |
Remark: The information presented on this website does not represent an offer to buy or sell anything, it is intended for educational purposes only. The European Graduate School is evaluating an Associate status with Amazon.com. Although it is advisable to use the aforementioned material for reading assigments and class studies, there are other publishers, editions and sources that might serve the same purpose.
Privacy Statement: The European Graduate School will not sell, lease or distribute any information, user names, addresses or any other information deemed private. The European Graduate School believes in users personal privacy and will not violate that trust.
|