Monday, November 11, 2013

Hello Class!

Here is your next assignment.


322W: Teen TV
Space, Consumption, TV Assignment: Creative Composition
Fall 2013
Dr. Joy Fuqua


DUE: Nov. 20, 2013


For this assignment, respond to Ellen Seiter’s questions with a creative composition using images, found sound and text, assembled images and words, spatial renderings, music montage, photographic assembly, video, or any other form that is NOT a five-paragraph paper.  Use this opportunity to compose a response to her arguments and our field trip to Toys R Us that engages the key themes and concepts of the course. The assignment has no preferred mode except that it be presentable in class to your peers and that is not exceed two minutes in length. You must select one question from two of Seiter’s categories and then compose your response. You might construct your own Pinterest page or tumblr or curate a series of images, texts, websites, etc. that express – through composition and assembly – your thoughts regarding the key concepts and ideas.

That is all the guidance I’ll provide. The rest is up to you. Surprise me. Surprise yourself. Remember, language is always the last to arrive so try another means of composing.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Hello Class,

Please post your responses to  Seiter and Toys R Us here. Still having some technical difficulties with out blog but hope to get it all fixed very soon! Thanks for your patience!

JF

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Hi Everyone,

Please feel free to post your responses to last week's prompt. Find a place in each of last week's assigned readings. Then using that quotation as your inspiration, have a dialogue with that writer in relation to our screening of The OC and Gilmore Girls. We will work with these comments in class.
Also, please make sure you read Allison James and Ellen Seiter for tonight! We will work in groups on these articles.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Hi Everybody,

Please feel free to post your blog comments here-- for the in-class work we tried to do last class regarding childhood mythologies and Buffy, the Vampire Slayer.

Best wishes for your upcoming papers.
Dr. Fuqua

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Hi Everybody!

Too bad we ran out of time last night what with the building evacuation and all! So, for our blog and our in-class viewing of "Welcome to the Hellmouth" (Buffy, the Vampire Slayer episode 1), please write a response to the discussion question about how characters in the show either reinforce or challenge some of the myths of childhood (or as they might apply to teenagers). Feel free to tweet your small group members and then write a collaborative blog post or write individually or do something creative!

Best and good luck with your writing process,
Prof. Fuqua

Friday, September 27, 2013

Hello Class!

Here is your first writing project assignment. You may select one or two historical or contemporary TV programs. If you have any questions, feel free to DM or email me.

Best,
JF


MEDST 322W:
Writing Project #1:
The Semiotically Adhesive Child
DUE: Wednesday, Oct. 9
5 pages, maximum
Dr. Joy Fuqua


“Like all myths, the innocent child has a history. In fact, one reason it can carry so many contradictory meanings is that our modern sense of the child is a palimpsest of ideas from different historical contexts – one part Romantic, one part Victorian, one part medieval, and one part modern. We do not so much discard old conceptions of the child as accrue additional meanings around what remains one of our most culturally potent signifiers.”
Henry Jenkins, 15

As we have discussed, there are many different meanings that we have stuck to the “semiotically adhesive child.” These meanings circulate as myths, ideas that structure and shape our ways of understanding childhood (teens) and children. These sticky, semiotic signs, can as we have seen, obscure the individual child and only encourage us to see him or her through various layers of semiotic adhesive. What would it take, we might wonder, for us to peel back these semiotic layers to see differently?

This assignment asks you to describe and analyze the layers of semiotic adhesive in relation to two teen characters in either one or two teen TV programs. In particular, you should identify at least one myth per character and explain how the character represents these myths. Drawing from the class lecture in which we stuck various meanings to the figure of the child, select your myths from that instance. Questions you should address: how do these characters represent or embody specific myths? How do these myths work in the program to construct particular meanings about these characters and encourage a particular way of seeing the characters? Does the teen character tend to reinforce or challenge these myths? What is the role that these characters play in the overall structure of the program(s)? What are the implications of these semiotic adhesives for our ways of understanding the child/childhood? Note, this last question asks about implications, not effects. We cannot know the influences or effects in advance, but we can talk about implications of these representations for reinforcing or challenging our own assumptions about children (teens) and childhood.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Hi Everbody. Here's a link to one of TV theorist Jason Mittell's blog posts on the topic of media violence and effects. Please read this for our next class and post at least one comment and one question you have after reading what Mittell has to say. Please indicate what you are responding to in his blog post (give a paragraph, etc. so we can find it).
http://justtv.wordpress.com/2012/12/17/media-violence-and-debating-effects-influences/

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Welcome to Our Class Blog!

Hello Everybody!
This is the first blog post for our class. At later dates, I will post comments, links, images, clips and other things for you to respond to. You are also encouraged to post comments, links, images, clips and other media to our blog. This blog belongs to the entire class. Cheers and more soon...

Professor Fuqua