CMS.998 / CMS.600 New Media Literacies, Spring 2007
Author(s)
Robison, Alice
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Alternative title
New Media Literacies
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This course serves as an in-depth look at literacy theory in media contexts, from its origins in ancient Greece to its functions and changes in the current age of digital media, participatory cultures, and technologized learning environments. Students will move quickly through traditional historical accounts of print literacies; the majority of the semester will focus on treating literacy as more than a functional skill (i.e., one's ability to read and write) and instead as a sophisticated set of meaning-making activities situated in specific social spaces. These new media literacies include the practices and concepts of: fan fiction writing, online social networking, videogaming, appropriation and remixing, transmedia navigation, multitasking, performance, distributed cognition, and collective intelligence. Assignments include weekly reading and writing assignments and an original research project. Readings will include Plato, Goody and Watt, Scribner and Cole, Graff, Brandt, Heath, Lemke, Gee, Alvermann, Jenkins, Hobbs, Pratt, Leander, Dyson, Levy, Kress, and Lankshear and Knobel.
Date issued
2007-06Other identifiers
CMS.998-Spring2007
Other identifiers
CMS.998
CMS.600
IMSCP-MD5-687166e4f70617b91fa1fd3e3d912471
Keywords
new media, literacy, web 2.0, comparative media, western literacy, social turn, media production, media use, media interpretation, literacy production
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