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MDIA 384: Video Art
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
An introduction to creation of video for the world wide web, focusing on conecptualization and aesthetics. Abobe Premiere software is the primary tool. Same as ART 384.
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MDIA 384 - Video Art
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MDIA 389: American Literature and Culture since 1945
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Explores how American literature has charted and shaped American cultural change since the end of World War II. Readings focus on the culture of the 1950s, the Vietnam era, and/or the "postmodern" period. Special attention is given to the role of media technologies--television, film, recorded sound, and digital media--in the transformation of American society.
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MDIA 389 - American Literature and Culture since 1945
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MDIA 390: Visual Culture Studies
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
What is "visual culture"? How does such a conception relate to the study of media and communication more generally? What are the recent intellectual contexts, debates, and conversations that have defined this field of study? This course addresses questions such as these through a wide range of approaches to the creation and interpretation of visual experience. It considers the many ways that paintings, photographs, films, fashions, and everyday material and technological objects both shape and are shaped by the concepts, values, and meanings that constitute cultural life in contemporary urban societies.
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MDIA 390 - Visual Culture Studies
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MDIA 392: New Media Studies
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
This course explores historical cases and contemporary developments in new media practices, technologies, and theories. Students will be introduced to the key concepts and critical tools for understanding and critically engaging new media. Students actively participate in producing and examining blogs, wikis, various social networking applications, and other forms of emerging media. Whether you just want to understand more about the cultural meaning(s) of the application through which you live your Facebook life, or whether perhaps you¿ve been following events in Iran lately and are fascinated by the roles new media have played in the election and aftermath, this course may be for you.
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MDIA 392 - New Media Studies
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MDIA 393: Special Topics in New Media
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Course focuses on a specific topic in new media studies( e.g., new media and transnational politics, new media epistemology, the mobile screen) as determined by instructor.
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MDIA 393 - Special Topics in New Media
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MDIA 394: Signs and Symbols in American Life
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
This introduction to semiotics focuses on the role that images, signs, and metaphors play in the everyday life of contemporary America. The notion of "text" is extended from an exclusively verbal reference to one that includes the imagery of sound, sight, and movement, and to the encoding of perceptual phenomena in underlying systems that organize our experience and influence our behavior.
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MDIA 394 - Signs and Symbols in American Life
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MDIA 395: Lincoln in Literature and Film
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Originally developed as part of the 2009 bicentennial "Lincoln semester" in the School of Arts & Sciences, "Lincoln in Literature & Film" focuses imaginative engagements with Lincoln's life and image by poets, novelists, playwrights, orators, essayists, visual artists, sculptors, composers, documentarians, and filmmakers. Selected works in various media are analyzed in relation to Lincoln's biography, the history of his time, and American culture as it has evolved over the past 150 years. Students should develop critical and analytical abilities and an understanding of the imaginative uses of history.
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MDIA 395 - Lincoln in Literature and Film
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MDIA 401: Media Rhetoric and Aesthetics
4.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Builds upon the aesthetic considerations and rhetorical strategies explored in previous core courses, with particular reference to visual communication. The lecture section emphasizes the conventions of practical aesthetics employed by professionals in mass media. In the lab section, students apply these critical principles by learning to manipulate photographs and other visual images, and to compose their own images using Adobe Photoshop software. Prerequisite MDIA 201 or HSCT 102.
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MDIA 401 - Media Rhetoric and Aesthetics
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MDIA 402: Media Composition
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Students continue to apply critical principles learned in MDIA 401 and other core courses as they develop advanced skills in sound and video composition and produce their own sound and moving image sequences using Final Cut Pro. Later, students do a collaborative project in an atmosphere that simulates professional field and studio production. Required for majors in the production track. Prerequisite: MDIA 401.
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MDIA 402 - Media Composition
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MDIA 403: Advanced Video Production
3.00 Credits
Catholic University of America
Allows qualified students to work as a team, under close supervision of the instructor, to produce a high-quality short video. Prerequisite: MDIA 402.
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MDIA 403 - Advanced Video Production
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