1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

26
1 Lecture 1: Lecture 1: Course Introduction Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng

Transcript of 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Page 1: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

1

Lecture 1:Lecture 1:Course IntroductionCourse Introduction

Professor Victoria Meng

Page 2: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

In This LectureIn This Lecture

I. Course Expectations and Requirements

II. Introduce Course Topic and Key Terms

Page 3: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Part I:Part I:Course ExpectationsCourse Expectationsand Requirementsand Requirements

1. Instructor

2. Distance learning

3. Graded work

Page 4: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

4

Instructor: Victoria MengInstructor: Victoria Meng

• BA in Visual and Environmental Studies, Harvard-Radcliffe

• MA in Cinema and Media Studies, UCLA

• PhD candidate in Cinema and Media Studies, UCLA

Page 5: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Research InterestsResearch Interests

5

• Animation• Documentary• Experimental Media•Chinese Cinemas• New and Digital Media

…and more! One Winter in China (Meng, 2002)

Page 6: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

ContactContact

[email protected]• No T.A.• Two business days• Need time for technical support

6

Page 7: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Teaching PhilosophyTeaching Philosophy

To learn is to literally change your mind!• Take active effort and repetition• Requires patience with yourself and

respect for others• Can be frustrating, but can also be fun• Develops awareness and builds self-

confidence

7

Page 8: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Distance LearningDistance Learning

• Requires basic technical knowhow• Asynchronous interactivity• Rewards organization and motivation• Must “stay with the program” to

succeed

8

Page 9: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Learning TasksLearning Tasks• Readings• Reading Reviews• Screening• Websites• Film Clips• Lectures (audio and

visual)• eBoard            

9

Page 10: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Graded WorkGraded Work

• Participation (weekly eboard posts)

• Exams (midterm and final)

• Critical Review (600-750 words)

10

No Late Work Accepted!

Page 11: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Very Important!Very Important!

Read the syllabus!Read the syllabus!

Check your email!Check your email!

11

Page 12: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Part II:Part II:Course Topic and Key TermsCourse Topic and Key Terms

Guiding questions:• What is this class about?• What is “emerging digital media?”• Why does it matter?• How can we study something that is

changing all the time?

12

Page 13: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

What is What is “Emerging Digital Media?”“Emerging Digital Media?”

• Emerge: move out of or away from something and come into view; become apparent, important, or prominent.

• Emerging: happening now.• But when is now? When did it start?

13

Page 14: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

What is What is “Emerging Digital Media?”“Emerging Digital Media?”

• Digitization: to encode diverse forms of information (text, sound, image, moving image, etc.) in binary code. (p.9)

• Digital characteristics: manipulable, networkable, dense, compressible, and impartial. (p.3)

14

Page 15: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

What is What is “Emerging Digital Media?”“Emerging Digital Media?”

• Media: Technologies for communication• Technology = Tools + Techniques +

Context (p.2, 24-27)• Communication is a social act with

cultural and political implications. (p. 28-39)

15

Page 16: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

So What?So What?

Why should we study emerging digital media?•It affects our daily lives•It affects our relationships with others•It has interesting properties that can be confusing and counter-intuitive

16

Page 17: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

So What?So What?Watch lesson clip: Did You Know 2.0

•The rhetoric surrounding emerging digital media can be intimidating.•People often speak of this topic as a crisis, a passing moment of danger and opportunity.•This class can help to put these developments into perspective.

17

Page 18: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

How Can We Study aHow Can We Study aMoving Target?Moving Target?

18

Page 19: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Course OrganizationCourse Organization

Unit I: Imagination and Practice

Unit II: Forms and Styles

Unit III: Identity and Community

19

Page 20: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

The Three Levels of The Three Levels of TechnologyTechnology

• Tools (Artifacts)

Example: computer and word processor

• Techniques (Activities)

Example: writing a paper using a computer

• Context (Arrangements)

Example: QWERTY, printers, attachments

20

Page 21: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

The Three Levels of The Three Levels of TechnologyTechnology

• Tools (Artifacts)

Example: letters, telegraph, telephone, email, Twitter/Skype/text/chat/Facebook/blogging…

• Techniques (Activities)

Example: staying in touch with friends and family

• Context (Arrangements)

Example: ?

21

Page 22: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Unit I:Unit I:Imagination and PracticeImagination and Practice

Key terms and concepts• Media and history (p.4-12)• Technological determinism (p.22-24)• Technology and culture (p.28-29)• Media, technology and identity

22

Page 23: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Unit II:Unit II:Forms and StylesForms and Styles

Key terms and concepts• Automation and creativity• Interactivity and immersion• Modularity and customization• Layers and simulations• Qualitative and quantitative

23

Page 24: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Unit III:Unit III:Identity and CommunityIdentity and Community

Key terms and concepts• Access to cyberspace• Conglomeration, convergence,

globalization• Intellectual property• Fandom

24

Page 25: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

Highlights from the ReadingsHighlights from the Readings

• New media > Digital media > Internet > World Wide Web

• Characteristics, pros, and cons of the internet as a new media technology (Table 1.2, p. 8)

• Characteristics, pros, and cons of the modern information society (Table 2.1, p. 22)

25

Page 26: 1 Lecture 1: Course Introduction Professor Victoria Meng.

End of Lecture 1End of Lecture 1

Next Lecture: Post-Book: How do media “forms” affect “content” or “experience?”

26