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Course Criteria
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5.00 Credits
Rhetorical criticism of historical public speeches, essays, and declarations. Includes readings of public texts in their historical and political context to increase understanding of those texts, their rhetorical construction, and the culture from which they arose. Covers the beginnings of the nation to the middle of the 20th century.
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5.00 Credits
Rhetorical criticism of contemporary public messages. Includes reading of public texts in their context to increase understanding of those texts, their rhetorical construction, and the culture from which they arose. Covers mid-20th century to the present.
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5.00 Credits
Rhetorical investigation of selected major writings. Examines the rhetorical dimension in the progress of ideas through analysis of documents of major intellectual revolutions as persuasive works. Relates principal revolutions in Western thought to contemporary controversy. Examines Rights of Man, Communist Manifesto, The Origin of Species.
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5.00 Credits
Survey of laws and regulations that affect the print and broadcast media. Includes material on First Amendment, libel, invasion of privacy, freedom of information, copyright, obscenity, advertising and broadcast regulation, and matters relating to press coverage of the judicial system. Offered: jointly with POL S 461.
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5.00 Credits
Development of mass communication in the United States with emphasis on role of mass media in politics, economics, gender, and race.
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5.00 Credits
Impact of pre-1980s media technologies — printing, telecommunications, broadcasting, photography, and more — on individuals and institutions, especially government, business, and the mass media. How laws and policies have changed to govern new media forms.
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5.00 Credits
Cote’, Hart, Ross Explores fiction, documentary, experimental film, and digital media from indigenous artists from around the world. Focuses on personal, political, and cultural expression. Issues include media and sovereignty movements, political economy, language revitalization, the politics of decolonization, and indigenous aesthetics. Offered jointly with AIS 443.
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5.00 Credits
Overview of issues, strategies, and role of public relations professionals in various areas of American society, including media relations, government relations, community affairs, and consumer relations.
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5.00 Credits
Explores the relationship between journalism and fiction writing in the United States. Examines writers who began their careers as journalists and forged a fiction-writing philosophy related to what they learned in journalism. Readings in fiction and journalism.
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5.00 Credits
Empirical and theoretical framework for analyzing role of mass media in cultural change. Historical and contemporary cases consider ethnic, gender, and urban-rural conflicts and cultural roles of sports, elections, and national rituals. Focus on visual electronic media.
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