FRS 002N — Sec. 001 — (2 units) — CRN 45509 — W 2:10-4:00pm — 245 AOB4
Globalization and the Media Industry

Instructor:
John Theobald, Department of Communication, College of Letters and Science

Description: The theme of the proposed FRS is Globalization and The Media Industry. Course material will include views of globalization as both a trend and a system. As a communication-related seminar, focus will be on the role of mediated developments shaping the globalized world. A range of topics will be explored, including the globalization of culture and politics, the relationship of media and security issues, the blurring of boundaries between nations and regions, and hopeful and threatening views of the process of globalization. Participants in the proposed seminar will become acquainted with various perspectives on globalization and will learn to analyze current developments in a range of transnational contexts as noted above. The primary goal of the seminar will be to enhance students' ability to apply their own observations of social developments in a global context.

Format: The first 5-6 meetings of the seminar will involve student discussion of various readings, video presentations, and concepts presented by the instructor. The last 3-4 meetings will be devoted to discussion of students' individual analyses leading toward course papers. In the first course meetings, all students will read a sample of views on globalization from such authors as Anthony Giddens, William Grieder, Robert Wright, Benjamin Barber, J.R. & William McNeill, and Thomas Friedman. In the last course meetings, students will acquire materials unique to their own research and present them to the class for discussion. Students will attend a 2-hour seminar once per week for the 10 week duration of the course. In the first part of the course, described above, students will be expected to spend approximately 3 hours per week reading the assigned material and one hour per week developing a proposal for a course paper. By the later weeks of the seminar, it is expected that students, in regular consultation with the instructor, will spend their time writing a paper that may be an analysis of current thought on globalization and the media industry or an original research paper oriented toward observations of how the world has (and has not) changed as a result of the globalization process variously described during the course. Suggested length of the proposal will be two pages. The paper should be 7 to 10 pages in length. Grading: There will be two grade components to the course that will be equally weighted. They will include: 1) a participation grade that will be based on regular class contributions and, in particular, presentation of individual research work, and 2) a course paper as described above.

About the Instructor: John Theobald is Lecturer in the Department of Communication, where he has been on the faculty since 1991. His primary course offerings include The Media Industry, News Policies and Practices, Media Analysis, and Media Effects. These courses include many themes, among them: media ownership, social consequences of technology, globalization, media and global security, news bias, journalism practices, commercial effects of contemporary media, media and ecological systems, and a range of politically related themes. Recent research interests include college orientation for high school students, ecological communication campaigns, and the selling of the tourism industry in the western United States. John has been a frequent commentator on media-related issues for print, radio, and television news agencies. He studied at UCLA, San Diego State University, and the University of Texas at Austin.