MEDIA 211

Watching Television


Please note: this is archived course information from 2021 for MEDIA 211.

Description

This course demonstrates the centrality and significance of television historically as well as in contemporary culture. It provides an introduction to the theoretical and methodological traditions of television studies, and explores the historical development and distinctive aesthetic style of television and the digital platforms on which TV shows currently appear. It examines television’s role in the production of individual, national and global identities, and interrogates television’s negotiation of social meanings in the context of everyday practices.

These questions will be addressed through particular themes, including the domestic context and temporality of television, modes of representation, audience reception, reality television, media convergence, cross-media mobility, streaming of “quality” programmes, fandom and the status of television in the digital age. Students will have the opportunity to focus on particular series, technologies and historical contexts.

In this course, you will be encouraged to connect your own everyday experiences of watching television and TV series with academic debates. By the end of the course you should have deepened your understanding of televisual platforms and their relation to contemporary culture as well as developed a scholarly understanding of some key ideas that have structured television studies since its emergence as a field of study in the mid-1970s.

Assessment

Coursework only

Availability 2021

Not taught in 2021

Lecturer(s)

Lecturer(s) Dr Jennifer Kirby

Points

MEDIA 211: 15 points

Prerequisites

15 points from COMMS 100, 104, FTVMS 100, 101, 110, MEDIA 101 and 45 points from any subject in BA courses

Restrictions

FTVMS 211, FTVMS 309, MEDIA 309