Comms Exam question for study



Tuesday 14th, Sorry I am ill today please try and do this question in your own time  and try and use some good contemporary examples as you apply what you have learned. Bring in for discussion next week

This is an example of the first question in the exam it should take you about an hour to answer.

Question 1

Online social networking has had an enormous impact on contemporary culture. There

is a great potential for all of us with internet access to join communities of shared

interest in every possible subject or just keep in touch with our friends. However, there

are competing views on how to interpret the broader cultural implications of social

networking. Some stress the positive and empowering aspects whilst others have

highlighted negative effects on both the individual and culture at large.

Carefully read Argument A and Argument B (opposite) relating to social networking,

before attempting the task below.

Task:

Use your knowledge of selected theoretical perspectives and key concepts to evaluate

the contrasting views of social networking expressed by Argument A and Argument B.

(40 marks)


Argument A

Online social networking is a fine example of the way in which technology can respond to a real

human need; in this case, the need for better, faster and more sophisticated interpersonal and

group communication. Online networking does not just improve social connectivity; it enables

knowledge to be pooled rapidly and efficiently so that businesses can work more effectively even

if workers are geographically dispersed. Social network sites encourage creative self-expression.

We can combine speech, music, writing and moving images to project ourselves as individuals

and as groups.

Argument B

Increasingly, our identities are projected to others not by face-to-face contact but via our presence

on online social networking sites. But social networks do not just help us to communicate; they

are changing the ways in which we think. We experiment with our identities, but only in ways

that are determined by consumer culture. We describe ourselves in terms of what we own

and consume and become addicted to the giving and receiving of tiny pieces of unimportant

information. As the information content becomes smaller and smaller, so our ability to

concentrate on more demanding forms of communication like the book or play or film diminishes.

The idea that we are part of communities enjoying real relationships is an illusion based only in

the virtual world. In reality, social networking encourages an unhealthy obsession with the self.


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CCS Hand it in !

Do not hesitate to email me if you have any questions 

good luck

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Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt School

I todays comms class we are going to look at the Walter Benjamin and the  Frankfurt School, I hope you have all found some links to discuss in the lesson as  next week we move on to Technology 

The work of Art in the age of its technological reproduction







 Your homework and in class work is on the links below


https://comms-critical-contextual-studies.site123.me/teaching-blog


https://comms-critical-contextual-studies.site123.me/homework-comms

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The Russia Files

The Russia Files

This week in Comms we will go back to looking at Hegemony theory in relation to the hegemonic bloc in Washington in relation to the allegations of Russian Interference in the US election.  You Homework and tasks for this week are here

Please make sure you bring the links for us to test in class next week



In CCS you have your V&A visits I hope you all have your two assignments that need to be completed there. Please look up the Circuit of Culture Model as a way towards describing your chosen objects.


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This week the week of Storm Ophelia

This week I will be discussing the Weinstein Rupture and the ensuing #Metoo social media campaign as an introduction to contemporary feminism in the Comms A2 Class. We will discuss the trailer for Bladerunner 2049 in this context.Woody Allen also weighed in on this What do we each think about this?

We will also look at Hegenomy Theory to think about what a feminist take on Cultural Hegemony might be? How do our agreements around power in society allow people like Weinstein to get away with all sorts of things?

Question: Having read through the links above, what do you think about this statement from David Gauntlett's Media, Gender and Identity 

"Men and Women are seen working side by side as equals. in the hospitals, schools and police stations of television land. Movie producers are wary of having women as screaming victims. and have realised that audiences will only laugh at images of the pretty housewife, and have reacted by showing women how to be sexy at work instead" (Gauntlett 2002 p57)

Has the battle   for equality in gender representation been won ?

Do women want to be shown how to be sexy at work?


In CCS we are going to the Tate and I am looking forward to seeing Soul of a Nation Art in the age of Black Power. I was at the Tate today and watched the 2012 three screen film work The Unfinished Conversation by John Akomfrah. This work completely engaged me as Stuart Hall's personal archive was juxtaposed with layered visions of British colonial history and narrated through the words of writers such as Virginia Wolf and Mervyn Peake I was mesmerised.

I also listened to the sound of Susan Hillers voice in her installation  Monument at the Tate Tanks I had never given the work the time to sit down and listen until today. Her soothing accent chatted so gently about time and memory and ways to read the words on the wall of lives lost saving others, but at times it became more pressing urgent and agitated. Again a must see work.

How successful do you think the Tate has been with this attempt at reparation /decolonising the institution? What do you notice about the hierarchies of staff positions as you navigate the gallery? How is this similar to The Cass? 

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