This course focuses on the concept of the/a public. Discusses how media and political actors rhetorically constitute the public; how they (and occasionally governments) constitute “public spaces”(virtual and material) in which public discourse takes place, and how institutional and technological forces constitute “public opinion” and articulate “the public interest.” On the other hand, we will consider how political economy of media and social practices facilitate or stifle spaces, political actors, and publics. The course will also compare contemporary manifestations of public-making with Habermas’s theory of the public sphere, which he thought was an area of social life vital to a legitimate democracy. The potentiality, control, and use of new communication technologies are explored in relation to the existence and future of a global public sphere.

Code
CM5025
Name
COMMUNICATION & THE GLOBAL PUBLIC SPHERE
Credits
4
Pre-requisites
Major=MA: Global Communications OR Major=MA: Global Comm. (Development Communications) OR Major=MA: Global Comm. (Digital Cultures and Industries) OR Major=MA: Global Comm. (Fashion Track) OR Major=MA: Global Comm. (Visual & Material Culture Track)
Co-requisites
None
Can be taken twice for credit?
No
Discipline
CM (Communications)
Level
Graduate
Type
Regular
CAMS ID
3078
Last update with CAMS
Understand the various conjugations of the concept of "the public"
Understand and be able to articulate the history and theory of the "public" and the "public sphere"
Identify and analyze operative definitions of the "public" within policy-making practices
Relate public sphere discourse to theories of democracy and civil society
Relate theory to practical analysis of social consciousness and human identities
Relate theory to practical analysis of media & global communication practices