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Communication 475
Pro-seminar in Cultural Studies and Critical Interpretation
Professor: Cameron McCarthy
Day & Time: Mon/Wed -3:00:-4:50
Office: 244 Greg Hall
Office Hrs: Mon/Wed -5:00-6:00
Phone: 244-4953
Location: Rm 333 Greg Hall
Course Description
This course will offer students the opportunity to become familiar with the
history, applications and limitations of several theoretical and methodological
approaches to the study of contemporary culture and popular media that have been
developed in the emergent research field known as cultural studies. It is
intended to provide students with analytical frameworks for understanding
contemporary cultural life. Debates and issues within cultural studies and
debates between cultural studies and other schools of thought will serve as the
organizing agenda for exploring: the relationships between culture, experience
and unequal social relations of gender, race, class, nation, and sexuality;
youth cultures, resistance through rituals; popular culture, power and public
policy; cultural imperialism and center-periphery relations; poststructuralism
and its implications for the study of culture; and the impact of cultural
studies across the disciplines. This course is interdisciplinary and should be
of interest to students with backgrounds in several different areas, including:
a) research methods that combine textual analysis of contemporary popular media
and culture with sociological analysis; b) theoretical encounters and bridges between continental thought and American traditions; c)
feminist theory,
poststructuralism, semiotics, cultural geography, psychoanalysis, queer theory,
marxist political economy analysis, postcolonialism and critical race theory; and d) the application of literary and rhetorical theories to the media and
popular culture. The pro-seminar will meet twice per week (for approximately 2
hours per session).
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