Admission requirements
This course is obligatory for students in the MA Book and Digital Media Studies. All others should contact the lecturer.
Description
Communication is an essential and basic characteristic of the human species. Developments in communication technologies, from writing, via print, to digital media, have influenced the inscription and transmission of human culture through the ages. Medial change is a sociotechnical process characterised by a mixture of continuities and discontinuities, driven by the inherent properties of the technologies and the sociocultural reactions to them. The current rise of digital text disrupts the traditional production, distribution and consumption of information. Among other effects, existing categorisations of media blur, new content genres come available on-line and the media industries are restructured by the process. This course provides a comprehensive conceptual introduction to medial change in general, and to the significance of the digital medium for present-day textual culture in particular. In the analysis of the role of the media particular emphasis will be on the current wholesale adoption in contemporary Western society of digital technology for inscribing and and communicating information and knowledge and its social consequences.
Course objectives
Students:
gain insight in the role of media as ‘transformative technologies’ in social and cultural history;
familiarise themselves with key concepts, definitions and models in the study of textual transmission and communication;
are introduced to scholarly debates on the nature of socio-technical change and its practical implications;
learn to understand the broad social and cultural implications of the introduction and advance of new mediums and the recurring patterns that characterise medial change as a sociotechnical process;
build skills to express themselves both in oral form during in-class discussions, in short written comments on Brightspace, and in long-form sustained argument through the course essay.
Timetable
The timetables are available through My Timetable.
Mode of instruction
Lecture
Seminar
Assessment method
Assessment
For each class, a thematic discussion is initiated on Brightspace by the lecturer. Each student should submit three brief responses (ca. 300 w) to such discussions, one of which should be written in the first half of the semester. The course is examined further with a final course essay on a topic of the student’s choice, in consultation with the lecturer.
Weighing
Average of three discussion posts: 25%
Course essay: 75%
Resit
The resit consists of the same components as the first attempt.
Inspection and feedback
How and when a paper review will take place will be disclosed together with the publication of the paper results at the latest. If a student requests a review within 30 days after publication of the paper results, an paper review will have to be organised.
Reading list
The following textbooks will be used extensively:
Adriaan van der Weel, Changing Our Textual Minds: Towards a Digital Order of Knowledge (Manchester UP, 2011).
Asa Briggs & Peter Burke, A Social History of the Media, from Gutenberg to the Internet (London: Polity Press; orig. 2002; 2nd ed. 2010, 3rd ed. 2018). Please use the second or third edition.
For each class selected articles should be studied; a full bibliography will be provided with materials freely accessible via the University Library.
Registration
Enrollment through uSis is mandatory. If you have any questions, please contact the departmental office, email: osz-oa-arsenaal@hum.leidenuniv.nl
Registration Studeren à la carte and Contractonderwijs
Not applicable
Contact
For substantive questions, contact the lecturer listed in the right information bar.
For questions about enrolment, admission, etc, contact the Education Administration Office: Arsenaal