Description: Hours: Three hours lecture Description: Media has played and continues to play an important role in our society's ever-evolving constructions and representations of race, as contextualized in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. For African Americans, at least, media representations often are gender-specific, providing political and social impetus for exaggerated and misrepresented black femininities and masculinities, and function in establishing a hierarchical system of color (pigmentocracy). This course will analyze and critique representations of African Americans in media¿newspapers and magazines, film, radio, television, and new media ¿ and explore the juxtaposition of external and internal representations of race and gender. Guiding questions for this course include: What are media representations of African Americans? What are the political and social implications of mass media representations of African Americans? How are these representations internalized by mainstream and black audiences?  What is African American media? Who authors African American media?
Units: 3.00
Grading: Student Option
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Session Section Class # Type Days Time Location Instructor Course Details [Key]
1 01 1794 LEC ARR Online Cameron Harris Course Closed Course Details General Education Course Asynchronous Online Course

Key for Course Detail Icons

Course open= Course Open Course Closed= Course Closed Course Details= Course Details
Textbook Info= Textbook Info General Education Class= General Education Extended University Class= Extended University
Service Learning Class= Service Learning In Person Class= In Person Asynchronous Online Class= Asynchronous Online
Synchronous Online Class= Synchronous Online Synchronous/Asynchronous Class= Synchronous/Asynchronous Blended Class= Blended
Synchronous/Asynchronous Class= No Cost Course Materials Low Cost Course Materials= Low Cost Course Materials
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