Our Public
Sphere
What does the Red Hot Chili's
Peppers video "Californication" tell us about our public
sphere? In other words, what are the Chili Peppers telling us
about our "world"? Who/what creates reality for us?
But isn't reality reality?
New
Media Examples
Assuming
the DVD works, we'll watch the following:
-
"Californication" video by the
Red Hot Chili Peppers
-
Tommy Vercetti in action in GTA: Vice
City
-
"Ayo Technology" video by 50
Cent (feat. Justin Timberlake and Timbaland)
-
"Umbrella" video by Rihanna (feat. Jay-Z)
-
"Singin' in the Rain" sung by
Gene Kelly
-
Classic
Umbrella "dancing" from the 1940s (Google Video)
-
Rihanna Wannabes from You Tube
New
Media Questions
Assuming
the DVD works, we'll watch the following:
Locating
American Values
Because this course is a theoretical
exploration of how we can locate a society's values by "reading"
its technologies, we ought to think about what those values are. This page asks you to think about
American values. The goal of this next exercise is to identify
values that we might be able to "read" technologies
from American society.
Emulating Celebrities
Time permitting, we'll look
at some other new media examples--Rihanna's and her fans:
- What did you notice about
Rihanna's tributes (or other tributes to videos/celebrities)
on YouTube and amateur videos?
- Why would someone make a
video of themselves and put it on YouTube?
- What does it say about our
culture that there are many "tributes" like the one
we saw in class online?
- How does the editing of
the video "Umbrella" affect our perception of the
narrative?
- What do the You Tube "tributes"
say about New Media?
Next
Class Readings
On Monday, we'll be looking at
the world through a Marxist lens. Please
preview tomorrow's page in order to help guide your reading
of the next two articles--Raymond Williams and Marx & Engels.
Although this is a reductive way to think about Marxist critiques,
we're just being introduced to ideas about Marxism. Instead of
discussing the attributes of Marxism in full detail (if such a
discussion is even possible), we'll be using Marixst theory to
analyze the cultures from where our New Media texts come. Remember,
all texts (like technologies) are cultural products.
Try to resist the temptation to read against these readings because you're immersed in a culture that's vehemently anti-Marx, anti-communism, and anti-socialism. We aren't reading to debate which system is best; instead, we're reading these to think further about what give power to beliefs about our "system."
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