English 147mc: Media Culture:
Film, Radio, Television, and the Internet

Professor Warner

University of California /Santa Barbara; Winter, 2004



| overview | schedule | assignments |student pages | links | UCSB English|


Schedule

Jan 6:  Introduction: Theorizing Media, Culture, and Media Culture

Introduction to Media Culture (Slide Lecture)


I. Film and the Culture Industry

Film: at the turn of the 20th century, moving pictures emerged as the most influential form of entertainment since the rise of the novel in the 18th century. As a medium, cinema was a hybrid form: part electronic (light), part chemical (photograph) and part mechanical (projector). Cinema in America started as an a secondary part of vaudaville entertainments, flourished in Nichelodeons patronized by the working class, and emerged as an ambitious narrative medium with D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation, to the point where by the 1930s, the average American city dweller went to the movies three times a week. The century-long popularity of film gives it a central role in 20th century media theories: from Benjamin’s concept of the loss of the aura and the rise of reception in the mode of “distraction”; for the Frankfurt school, film is central to the industry that, by producing mass desire for the celebrity, invades everyday life with the logic of the commodity (how can I get muscles as large as his?, legs as pretty as hers?); and Lev Manovich, in The Language of New Media, demonstrates how the movement of the image into digital code, allows us to operate upon photorealistic images with the same freedom with which used to be only possible in the animated film.

A famous photograph quiz

Jan 8: The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

Introduction to Walter Benjamin (Slide Lecture)

Reading:

Media text: Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954)

Web Exhibition: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Celebrating the Centenary of Britain's Greatest Filmmaker;
The Bill Douglas Centre, University of Exeter, UK


Jan 13: Benjamin, film and Visualization

Film and Visualization: the case of Rear Window (slide lecture)

  • Media text: Hitchcock, Rear Window (1954)

Assignment due Jan 13: Write a 2-page essay on Benjamin's , "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction"

Choose from one of these topics. Develop a coherent essay supporting a clear thesis about how Benjamin's essay invites us to think about ONE of these three topics:

  • The image in the age of mechanical reproduction, OR
  • The actor in the age of mechanical reproduction , OR
  • Film as art for the modern, urban, masses

 


Jan 15: The Institution of Cinema: the case of The Birth of a Nation (1915) 

The General Traits of Film (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • Daniel Czitrom, "American Motion Pictures and the New Popular Culture, 1892-1918"
  • Media text: D. W. Griffiths, The Birth of a Nation
Workshop on Editing Web Pages with Dreamweaver

Things to figure out how to do:
Your can get help at "Getting Started with Dreamweaver"
  1. Doing a Dreamweaver Site definition
  2. Create a page by setting page properties: background color; title of page; etc.
  3. Inserting a Table with its properties
  4. Link within your page; link to web pages
  5. Insert an image (after you have borrowed one?)
  6. Copy text from word processor or other web sites into your page
  7. Scan an physical image by using the scanner
  8. Try out all the features that interest you.... (Play!)
  9. "Upload the Page" [Later you will publish to our Transcription course site.]
Warner's "Brief History of the Web" in the words of Tim Berns-Lee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Jan 20: The Frankfurt School and the Culture Industry: the example of Celebrity

The Culture Industry (a slide lecture)

Reading:

  • Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, “The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception” Reader
  • Questions for reading "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception"

Assignment: Formation of teams: bring topics that might interest you; we will use a random access session to finalize the 8-10 teams


Jan 22: George Orwell, 1984

Reading: Orwell's, 1984 [Required text]

Workshop (part II): Working as a team on 12 computers; research on topic using he web; preliminary design ideas.


Jan 27: 1984 (continued)

George Orwell: 1984 (slide lecture)

Reading: Mark Crispin Miller, "Big Brother is You, Watching"

Media text: Apple's 1984 "Big Brother" ad

Assignment due Jan 27: Write a 2-page response essay to Miller's interpretation of the implications of Orwell's 1984 for our understanding of modern media.


II. Radio, Fascism and Propaganda

Radio: in the 1920s, wireless transmission of information, first designed for communications between ships at sea by the navy, and then picked up by ham radio hobbyists for (morse) code transmission, and only later voice transmission, was developed into a form of mass entertainment. David Sarnoff, the young President of RCA, plays an important role in promoting radio as a mass medium; though his later attempt to present himself as the father of radio is problematic. The emergence of radio as a mass medium, in between 1921 (with the Dempsey-Carpentier prize fight) and 1947 (the first year of American television), transforms the American media sphere: it allows for the rise of the American national networks (NBC, CBS, ABC), which broadcast “free” programming supported by advertising; radio makes possible live reception in America of the huge Nazi rallies at Nurenberg, President Roosevelt’s fire side chats; radio brings live coverage of the Republican and Democratic nominating conventions, the 1938 Munich crisis as it unfolds, as well as of the Battle of Britain in 1940. The development of many of the media forms of radio later moved to television (from the variety show, quiz show, soap opera, situation comedy, detective show, etc.). Within all countries (whether fascist and democratic), radio technology helped to promote national unity. While print required the ability to read, radio relied on nothing more than the ability to understand the language of the radio transmission. And if all listened to the same voice at the same time (whether it is that of Edward R. Murrow covering the Battle of Britain or Frank Sinatra crooning), then one could believe that one shared a common experience, and "imagined community" of radio listeners.
Useful links :

Thomas H. White's authoritative United States Early Radio History, with overview and links to many key documents and articles about early readio.

Halper's History of Radio, with brief clips of the 1938 Munich crisis and Roosevelts "fireside chats"


Jan 29: The Institution of Radio

Reading:

 

  • Daniel Czitrom, “The Ethereal Hearth: American Radio from Wireless through Broadcasting, 1992-1940”, Media and the American Mind, From Morse to McLuhan, Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina Pr., 1982. Chapter 3, 60-88.
  • Susan J. Douglas: captioned photos from Listening In
  • Text of radio play of The War of the Worlds (1938)

Screen: War of the Worlds radio show: The Mercury Theater of the Air: The War of the Worlds (October 30, 1938)


Feb 3: The "public mission" of Radio versus radio commerce: the Case of David Sarnoff

The Emergence of Radio Broadcasting in the US (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • David Sarnoff, from Looking Ahead: the Papers of David Sarnoff , New York: McGraw Hill, 1968. “Radio Broadcasting” 29-65.
  • Marshall McLuhan, "American Advertising" (1947), Ed. Eric McLuhan and Frank Zingrone, Essential McLuhan, New York: Basic Books, 1995, 13-20.
  • Links: Hitler, Roosevelt, Churchill, Edward R. Murrow: Halper's History of Radio 

Film screening: Frank Capra (dir.), Meet John Doe


Feb 5: Radio: the FCC and controlling "bad" media content

"the broadcast media have established a uniquely pervasive presence in the lives of all Americans." --Justice Stevens

Indecency in Media (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • FCC v Pacifica Radio (George Carlin '7 Dirty Words' Case), Jerry Kang [R]

Visitor (possible): Jerry Cornfield, creator of "The Voice of Santa Barbara"


Feb 10: Media as Propaganda System

Propaganda and a Free Press (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman, “A Propaganda Model” [R]

Screen and discuss: Documentary about Chompsky

Assignment due (Feb 10): 2-page essay on Chompsky-Herman essay addressing the question, "How can a society with a 'free press' practice propaganda?"


III. Television and the emergence of the Media Theory paradigm

Television: American television started regular broadcasting in 1947, and by 1955 2/3rds of all American homes had made room for television in their lives and living rooms. The rapid expansion of live network television is partly explained by the agility with which the radio networks transferred their whole commercial and cultural formula to television: live network broadcasting; free programming interrupted by ads from our “sponsors;” all the generic categories of radio, and even specific popular shows like “Ames and Andy” and “Gunsmoke". Even FCC regulation followed radio into televsion. The rapid acceptance of television by Americans—television may be the most popular medium since speech—resulted in part from American affluence and the movement from urban centers, where live entertainment was plentiful, to the suburbs, where it was not. In the half century since the beginning of live television broadcasts, television has changed under the influence of the arrival of color, the remote control, the VCR, cable, satellite transmission, and the DVD. Each change in the technological infrastructure of television made new media forms possible (for example, cable enabled MTV and CNN.) In the 1960s, there develops a broad recognition that television had won a leading and decisive role in the modern media sphere. Guy Debord calls this new, superficially unified televisual world, “the society of the spectacle.” [Perhaps, it Is a world prepared for terrorism.] The enormous cultural influence of television provokes Marshall McLuhan into developing a general theory of media; in his optimistic moments, he summons us toward the a powerful new form of oral-electronic culture, what he calls “the global village.”

Feb 12: Institutionalizing Televsion: Comedy and Violence

Televsion as a Technology of War (slide lecture)

Making Room for Televsion (slide lecture)

Media Morphing: Superman and I Love Lucy (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • Lynn Sigel, Making Room for TV, Chicago: U of Chicago Pr.,1992. ”Introduction,” 1-10; “Television in the Family Circle,” 36-72. [R]
  • Samuel Weber, "The Media and War" (Gulf War I)
  • Newton Minow, "Television and the Public Interest" (the vast wasteland speech)

Screening-discussion:

 



Feb 17: The Medium is the Message/ Massage: the Rhetoric of Marshall McLuhan

Marshall McLuhan: Inventor of Media Theory, or a Mythology about Media? (slide lecture)

Reading:

  • Marshall McLuhan, from The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man. New York: Vanguard Press, 1951. "Woman in a Mirror", 80-82. "The Mechanical Bride", 98-101. "Freedom-- American Style", 117-117. [R]
  • Marshall McLuhan, "The Medium is the Message" [R]
  • Marshall McLuhan, Quentin Fiore, The Medium is the Massage: an inventory of effects. [Required text]

Feb 19: Marshall McLuhan (continued)

Assignment for Thursday, Feb 19: Write a 2-page response paper that weaves
together these three elements:
1) Choose one significant strand of McLuhan’s argument about contemporary
media in Medium is the Massage (1967) and offer a brief summary of the idea
2) Develop a critical response to the idea by agreeing with, qualifying, or
disagreeing with the idea.
3) To support your argument, offer examples from contemporary media to
apply, test, extend, or refute McLuhan’s idea about media.


Feb 24: The Popular Culture Paradigm: the British School of Cultural Studies

Reading:

Assignment due Feb 24: Team project web page with 5 elements: overview page, annotated links, annotated bibliography, timeline of your topic, digitized media. 


Feb 26: Birmingham School: Style as Critique

Stuart Hall and the Cultural Study of Media: Slide Lecture

Reading

  • Dick Hebdige, "From Culture to Hegemony"; "Subculture: the Unnatural Break", Durham & Kellner, 198-216.

Visitor: Professor of Art and Film Studies, and Director of the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center at UCSB, Dick Hebdige

Assignment: 1-page: attempt to apply Hebdige's thesis to a popular culture style that you know well. Do you agree that style can function as a critique of culture?


IV. New Media and Computable Culture

After the Digital Mutation: the computer was developed in the 1940s as a machine for increasing the speed of command and control: for decoding German encryption quickly, for targeting missiles in real time. In the decades since the 1940s the computer, and the software algorithms that lie as the center of its operational power, was applied to data processing for business and government; were made into the hubs and routers of communications networks (telephones, local area networks, the Internet), and finally appeared in the form of the personal computer on our desks and laps in the last quarter of the 20th century. In order to make information computable it must be turned into 0s and 1s; but the information the computer contains and operates upon, can become resident in many media forms: as paper tape, punch cards, magnetic tape, hard drives, screens, sound, etc. In fact, the ductility and plasticity of information has enabled us to translate all of our earlier natural and electronic media forms onto the computer. This has led Lev Manovich to describe the computer as the “universal media machine.” This is at once insightful and misleading. For there is a very real sense in which software code is free of any necessary relation to any medium; it is an a-media, that can be invested with many different media forms (as screen image; as sound; as print; as film; etc.) This has threatened to transform the media ecology, a change that corporations will resist (c.f. Napster).


March 2: After the Digital Mutation: Promoting the New Media Paradigm

The Networked Computer as New Media: Slide lecture

Reading

  • Bill Gates, "The Beginning of the Informaiton Age" from The Road Ahead. [R]
  • Nicholas Negroponte, "Being Digital" [R]
  • J.P Barlow, "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace" http://www.eff.org/Publications/John_Perry_Barlow/barlow_0296.declaration
  • Recommended: Jerry Klang, "The Nature of Cyberspace" and "What is the Internet?" [R]

Visitor: Professor of English, Alan Liu: New Elements of Communication and the War of Metaphors for Accounting for the Internet


March 4: Defining Computable Culture & Exam Review

What Computable Media Is

Hacking Hollywood to Liberate Film

Reading:

  • Manovich, Lev. Selections from The Language on New Media, Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2001, “Principles of New Media,” 27-48. [R]
Exam review: Frameworks for Studying 20th Century Media Culture

March 9: Exam: matching, quote identification, 2 short essays   

Recommended steps in studying for the exam, which functions as the course's check on how well you have understood the reading.

  • Read each assigned essay in the class
  • Use your class notes and the on-line slide lectures to focus in on key passages
  • Outline the central concepts and themes of the main theorists we have read: Benjamin, Frankfurt school, Habermas, Chopsky, McLuhan, Hall, Weber
  • Reading the text on our web site (along with the assigned writings of Czitrom, Sarnoff, Spigel, and Gates) identify the main steps by which film, radio, television and the Internet become influential media institutions.
  • Develop examples of these concepts from the media texts of the course ("The War of the Worlds"; "I Love Lucy"; 1984, Rear Window, etc.)

March 11: Cyborgs 'r Us; End our Class Lunch

Have we become cyborgs? Discussion of Donna Haraway, “A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century.” [R]
Media texts: Robocop, Terminator, Blade Runner,…

Time scheduled for project team work


Team Project Presentation: Tuesday March 16, 2004: 12:00-3:00 PM

  • Final Team Project Presentations will take place during this scheduled "final exam" time slot
  • A printed copy of each student's final 5-paper is also due this day. 
  • Evaluation of your fellow team members contribution  

| overview | schedule | assignments |student pages | links | UCSB English |