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This course explores the way that audiences respond to the mass media, from news stories to science fiction and reality TV. It draws on a range of theories of audiences to address key questions around the media such as what violent images do to viewers, what we learn from the news and how ratings shape television schedules.
How does our media consumption shape our opinions, actions, identities and lives? How doaudiences influence the production and circulation of media? How do we create our own mediapresence online, and act as an audience for each other? This course will examine the relationshipbetween audiences and media. We will discuss theory and research that represents audiences aspassive consumers of media products, active decoders of media texts, producers of our ownrepresentations online, and participants in interactive media production. The course will look at abroad range of media forms (such as television, radio, film, the Internet, social networking, hometheatre, cell phones and videogames), and content (including violence, music, reality television,soap operas, news, Facebook, Twitter, and blogs). “Media Audiences” will encourage you to reflecton your own relationship with media, and to consider the broader contexts that shape yourlistening, viewing, reading, and interaction.We will also be intertwining the theory of audiences with a ‘live' research exercise which will guideyou through the necessary steps to conducting your own research.
By the end of the course, you should be able to:- describe a range of theories of the audience- apply these theories to contemporary media issues and debates- use these theories to critique each other- use audience research to discuss the relationship of media and culture- reflect critically on your own media use- use audience research methodologies to design and conduct your own research.
15 points at the 100 level in COMS. Students without this prerequisite, but with at least a B average in 60 points of relevant courses, may enter the course with the approval of the Department Coordinator or the Undergraduate Coordinator for COMS.
CULT201
Zita Joyce
There will be a compulsory reading set for each week of this course, and it is expected that you willread it before the lecture. The Learn page also contains extra material for each week, which will bereferred to in the lectures, and should be useful for your own research and exam questions.The course readings will be available as PDFs on Learn.
Library portalLearn Referencing for Media & Communication Using EndNote for referencing Writing guides for Media & Communication
Domestic fee $717.00
International fee $2,913.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
For further information see Language, Social and Political Sciences .