Activist Media
MFJS3150/EDP3725/ EDPX4725
2:00-3:50 Tuesdays and
Thursdays, Shwayder Art Building 118
Professor: Adrienne
Russell, adrienne.russell@du.edu
Office hours T 1-2 or by
appointment
This
course focuses on media activism over the past half-century, with an emphasis
its contemporary forms and practices. We’ll examine how strategies are changing
with an emphasis the use of new and old
media in efforts at social change.
The
objectives of this course are two-fold: 1) to become familiar with the various
debates surrounding the relationship between media and cultural, economic, and
political change; 2) develop analytical and theoretical tools to examine specific contemporary movements for change and their use and development of emergent
communication tools and practices.
Classes will combine lectures, guest talks, student presentations and discussion. We'll conduct discussions both within the traditional classroom setting and on a course blog. Please remember that discussion is a way of helping you to see different sides of issues and to evaluate different arguments. It is essential in the development of your thinking that you participate in discussions and that you work to express your thoughts effectively.
REQUIRED
BOOKS AND OTHER READING
Beautiful
Trouble edited by Andrew Boyd
Networked
of Outrage and Hope by Manuel Castells
Graduate Students
This
is an Uprising by Mark Engler and Paul Engler
Other
reading will be posted in the schedule.
ASSIGNMENTS/EXAM
Blog
You
will receive an invitation via email to join our blog group. Please follow the
directions in the email. This is not an extended discussion format as much as
it is a graffiti wall and an ongoing exercise in collaborative linking. At
least 2 times over the course of the quarter you should contribute to our blog
a link and a short review (1 paragraph) of a site, article, example of activist
media, art project, news story, or other resource relevant to the reading
assignments. Please make it good! And please read and comment on the posts by
your classmates.
Exams
There
will be a midterm and a final essay exam.
Final Project Beautiful Trouble entry
For
your final project, please choose media activist who has not yet been featured
in Beautiful
Trouble to interview.
Once
you have conducted your interview you will:
- Create
a "case study" of your subject/subject’s work for inclusion in Beautiful
Trouble
- Devise
a new "principle" (not yet included in that book) based on your
subject's experience (review it/them with your interviewee to see whether
it reflects their sentiments!)
- Connect your new case study to at least 3 principles or tactics already included in BT by which the activist (or action) operates.
All
of these components will be combined into one streamlined BT entry, just like
the ones in the book. Ultimate inclusion in Beautiful
Trouble is not guaranteed, but we'll workshop entries to give them the
best shot they can have.
Timeline
(note: the
due dates may shift upon discussion, depending on practical work):
- 4/6: Choice of interview subject due
- 4/11: Bring draft questions to class (on your computer)
- Schedule
interview between 4/11 and 5/9!
- 5/16
Draft of Case Due in class: Workshop drafts of BT entries in class.
- 6/1: A final draft of your main Beautiful Trouble entry (case study, related principles, new principle, etc.) is due.
Suggestions/guidelines
for conducting Beautiful Trouble interviews
Before
you actually interview your subject, you should already have a
hypothesis about what you're going to find; the interview is the evidence that will support or disprove your
hypothesis. In other words, the interview should enhance and enrich your entry,
not determine it. Here are some guidelines:
- Start by reading about your subject, including if possible some interviews; get familiar with what's already been figured out by others. Your subject will love you for not asking the same old questions. (You should theoretically be able to write the entry without actually interviewing your subject!)
- Before the interview, make a list of some of the BT principles you think your subject's experience might demonstrate. Also, think of a brand-new principle (not yet listed in BT) you think it might demonstrate.
This
article has some good interview tips.
ADDITIONAL
ASSIGNMENTS FOR GRADUATE CREDIT
Graduate
students will have slightly different requirement for the final projects, to be
specified on a case-by-case basis.
All
graduate students will be asked to read This
is an Uprising, meet to discuss it, and submit a book review linking it to
the current political landscape by the end of the quarter. The discussion
meeting times are TBA.
EVALUATION
Attendance/Participation
200 points (including possible occasional reading quizzes)
Midterm
100 points
Final
100 points
Beautiful
Trouble Entry 100 points
Blog
participation 50 points
Book
discussion and review for Grad Students 100 points.
PERSONAL
STANDARDS
Please
note that 200 out of 550 (650 for grad students) possible points in this class
have to do with you showing up and engaging with the class material. If you do
not come to class or you come unprepared you will not do well in this class.
We
will occasionally do in-class assignments that involve use of computers but for
the most part I will ask that you keep your computers closed and your phones in
your bags.
If you are having trouble understanding
expectations, assignments or course material, please speak up. It’s important
to me not to leave anybody behind.
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