Universität Wien

124260 KO Critical Media Analysis (2015S)

Remix Cultures

6.00 ECTS (2.00 SWS), SPL 12 - Anglistik
Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung

An/Abmeldung

Hinweis: Ihr Anmeldezeitpunkt innerhalb der Frist hat keine Auswirkungen auf die Platzvergabe (kein "first come, first served").

Details

max. 30 Teilnehmer*innen
Sprache: Englisch

Lehrende

Termine (iCal) - nächster Termin ist mit N markiert

  • Montag 09.03. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 16.03. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 23.03. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 13.04. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 20.04. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 27.04. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 04.05. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 11.05. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 18.05. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 01.06. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 08.06. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 15.06. 10:00 - 12:00 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Montag 22.06. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
  • Montag 29.06. 10:00 - 12:00 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21

Information

Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung

This course will explore how reproduction technologies, from the printing press to the camera to the phonograph, changed our relationship to culture, and how new digital technological innovations, from youtube to free remixing software, are actively re-transforming the nature of culture’s circuit of creation and consumption in the Internet Age. This will be achieved by investigating the ideas of Remix Theory, a burgeoning school of Culture and Media Studies that explores the idea that technologies and culture do not evolve independently, and that we find ourselves currently at the nascent point of a cultural paradigm shift towards a dominant Remix Culture.
Lawrence Lessig has argued that as a result of technologies of mass production introduced over the last five centuries, the general public became “just consumers of culture, not also producers.” Lessig characterizes this cultural paradigm shift as a move from “Read/Write” (R/W) to “Read/Only” (R/O) culture. Yet, over the course of the last century a strong counter-discourse to this prevailing model of R/O culture slowly developed. From postmodern pastiche and collage to DJ and hip-hop remix aesthetics, culture has been democratized by new theories and digital technologies to the point that in the current era culture occurs “in a networked, participatory environment, which breaks down the boundaries between producers and consumers and instead enables all participants to be users as well as producers of information and knowledge.”
This course will introduce students to Remix Theory and Remix Culture through collage films such as Woody Allen’s What’s Up, Tiger Lily?, Orson Welles’ F For Fake, and Carl Reiner’s Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid to contemporary youtube film mash-ups and memes; through the postmodern collage artworks of Andy Warhol and Richard Hamilton (and through their Victorian and Surrealist forebears) as well as street graffiti; to musical hybridization from Musique concrete to Jamaican dance-hall, Hip-Hop, and contemporary mash-ups. Exploring the consequences of this new R/W culture for the production and consumption of cultural artifacts will also allow us to introduce and engage with a number of key theoretical ideas in Culture and Media studies, such as questions of authenticity, original v. copy, and the conflict between authorized and deauthorized voices. Along the way we will consider these issues alongside various theoretical paradigms, such as Lévi-Strauss’s concept of bricolage, Max Ernst’s theory of collage, Stuart Hall’s model of mass communication, postmodern theories of intertextuality and authorship (Barthes, Foucault), questions of copyright and ownership, and the semiotic differences between old and new media.

Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel

Student presentation, Research assignments, and final essay

Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab

Uses Lawrence Lessigs’s theory of Remix Culture to teach students about the intersection between technology and cultural forms, theories of High Culture v. the popular, simulacra & simulation, race, gender, etc. in a series of twentieth-century popular genres (music, film, art)

Prüfungsstoff

Literatur

Online Moodle Reader

Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis

Studium: UF 344, BA 612, BEd 046
Code/Modul: UF 4.2.5-426, BA07.3; BEd 08a.2, BEd 08b.1
Lehrinhalt: 12-4260

Letzte Änderung: Mi 09.09.2020 00:22