Bruce Henderson, Professor and Coordinator
The major makes connections between two intellectual areas: the study of how culture informs and shapes all aspects of communication, and its corollary area of investigation, how communication is the process through which culture is created, modified, and challenged. To explore these dynamic relationships, students consider culture and communication from a variety of intellectual perspectives from schools and divisions at the College.
This unique interdisciplinary program draws from the curricula and faculties in the Departments of Speech Communication; Television-Radio; Cinema, Photography, and Media Arts; and Strategic Communication. Majors must complete six core courses and one foundation course for each area of inquiry, satisfy the requirements for a minor in a complementary field, achieve foreign language proficiency, and complete the full requirements for one of four areas of inquiry. The areas of inquiry are international and intercultural communication, media and cultural studies, organizational culture and technology, and visual and cinema studies. In addition to work in the four foundation areas, students select liberal arts courses from a wide range of areas, including English, art history, theater arts, web development, sociology, music, politics, modern languages and literatures, business, and health policy studies.
Culture and communication majors build an interdisciplinary intellectual framework that forges connections between a variety of ways to study culture and a diversity of communication forms, practices, and organizations. The interdisciplinary curriculum provides students with diverse and easily transferable conceptual skills in critical thinking, analytical writing, and research methods across the humanities and social sciences. The major and minor not only offer preparation to enter an increasingly complex global culture, but also open up a wide, flexible range of opportunities not limited to one communications enterprise or postgraduate area of study. The culture and communication program emphasizes intellectual agility and lifelong learning skills required for success in a constantly changing world.
WRTG xxxxx |
Any level-1 composition course from WRTG 10600 through WRTG 16500 (except WRTG 10100; placement based on verbal SAT and a writing sample) |
3 |
SPCM 11000 |
Public Communication |
3 |
CLTC 10000 |
Introduction to Culture and Communication |
3 |
SPCM 12000 |
Communication, Culture, and Rhetoric |
3 |
WRTG 31800 |
Writing from Cultural Experience* or |
3 |
WRTG 32000 |
Public Essay |
3 |
CLTC 48000 |
Seminar in Culture and Communication |
3 |
Total, core courses |
18 |
*Course has prerequisite(s) that the student is responsible for meeting. (Note: Virtually all the prerequisites are minimal -- a specified number of courses in the liberal arts, class standing, etc.)
TVR 22000 |
Global Flow of Information |
3 |
TVR 12100 |
Introduction to Mass Media |
3 |
STCM 20000 |
The Digital Workplace |
3 |
CNPH 10100 |
Introduction to Film Aesthetics and Analysis |
3 |
Total, foundation courses |
12 |
Students select one of the following four areas of inquiry and complete its requirements:
International and intercultural communication |
21 |
Media and cultural studies |
21 |
Organizational culture and technology |
21 |
Visual and cinema |
21 |
Total, B.A. in culture and communication |
51 |
Language requirement: Culture and communication majors are required to complete a foreign language through the intermediate level or to demonstrate equivalent proficiency as part of their degree requirements. This may require up to four courses, depending on the level of proficiency demonstrated.
The infrastructure of global communication systems manifests itself in text and images speeding around the world, from Hurricane Katrina to the Iraq War. The international and intercultural communication area of inquiry is an interdisciplinary liberal arts program that recognizes the importance of developing rich, nuanced understandings of increasingly multicultural and technologically connected international environments.
This program draws on multiple perspectives in the humanities and in the technical and social sciences (such as anthropology, politics, and sociology), as well as on comparative media studies, which investigates different cultural, national, and ethnic groups. Through this area of inquiry, students learn how cultures are produced, transmitted, and transformed through the discourses of literature, language, sounds and images, and nonverbal communication.
TVR 26200 |
Qualitative Mass Media Research Methods |
3 |
Choose six courses from the following, at least three at level 3 or above, and no more than three from any department:
TVR 32400 |
European Mass Media* |
|
TVR 42600 |
Seminar in Geomedia* |
STCM 36000 |
Communication in Culturally Diverse Organizations* |
HPS 11000 |
War, Hunger, and Genocide: An International Health Perspective |
|
HPS 25000 |
International Health Issues* |
ANTH 22000 |
Southeast Asia: Its Peoples and Cultures* |
|
ANTH 22500 |
South Asia: India and Its Neighbors* |
|
ANTH 23500 |
Jewish Cultures: A World View* |
|
ANTH 24100 |
Modern Africa* |
|
ANTH 27000 |
North American Indians* |
|
ANTH 28500 |
Caribbean Cultures* |
|
ANTH 31000 |
Culture and Personality* |
HIST 20300 |
Introductory Geography* |
|
SOCI 20900 |
Ethnic United States since the Civil War* |
|
HIST 32000 |
The United States and the Third World* |
POLT 12900 |
Introduction to Global Studies |
|
POLT 32800 |
International Conflict* |
|
POLT 32900 |
Third World Politics* |
RLST 20100 |
Religion and Culture* |
|
RLST 20200 |
Religion and Society* |
SOCI 11600 |
Introduction to Multicultural Studies |
|
SOCI 20700 |
Race and Ethnicity* |
|
SOCI 30300 |
Global Race and Ethnic Relations* |
SPCM 33200 |
Folklore and Cultural Performances* |
|
SPCM 34700 |
Intercultural Communication* |
|
Total, international and intercultural communication area of inquiry |
21 |
*Course has prerequisite(s) that the student is responsible for meeting. (Note: Virtually all the prerequisites are minimal -- a specified number of courses in the liberal arts, class standing, etc.)
One of the fastest-growing fields of study at academic institutions around the world, media and cultural studies integrates both the humanities and the social sciences in its attempt to understand cultural artifacts, practices, and ways of life -- often, although not exclusively, centering on media and popular culture.
The area of inquiry in media and cultural studies incorporates courses from 12 departments in four schools. In addition to the departments more traditionally associated with cultural studies, this area also includes courses in art history, sport studies, music, and health policy studies.
This area of inquiry differs significantly from the visual and cinema studies area of inquiry in that the latter draws more heavily from the humanities, including art history, literary theory, and cinema studies. Media and cultural studies draws more from the social sciences, notably anthropology, sociology, and politics, in its attempt to understand social and cultural practice -- in particular, media as social and cultural phenomena. Media and cultural studies addresses audiences, industries, economics, and effects, as well as media content.
SPCM 32800 |
Uses and Methods of Communication Criticism |
3 |
Choose six courses from the following, at least three at level 3 or above, and no more than three from any department:
TVR 12200 |
Introduction to Media Aesthetics and Analysis |
|
TVR 31200 |
Government and Media* |
|
TVR 32200 | New Telecommunication Technologies* | |
TVR 33500 |
Electronic Media Criticism* |
|
TVR 38800 |
Alternative Media* |
|
TVR 46000 |
Senior Seminar: Topics in Media Effects* |
CNPH 21400 |
Hollywood and American Film |
4 |
CNPH 30300 |
Images of Men and Women in Mass Media* |
SPCM 33200 |
Folklore and Cultural Performances* |
ANTH 10400 |
Cultural Anthropology |
|
ANTH 34500 |
Life Stories: An Ethnographic Approach* |
ARTH 13500 |
Visual Culture* |
|
ARTH 13700 |
Visual Persuasion* |
|
ARTH 25500 |
The Mediated Image* |
HIST 27200 |
History of the Future* |
POLT 10200 |
Media and Politics |
|
POLT 34200 |
Liberalism and Marxism* |
|
POLT 34300 |
Feminist Theory* |
SOCI 11600 |
Introduction to Multicultural Studies |
|
SOCI 13000 |
Youth and Youth Cultures* |
|
SOCI 20700 |
Race and Ethnicity* |
|
SOCI 21000 |
Women's Lives* |
|
SOCI 22800 |
Men's Lives* |
|
SOCI 32500 |
Race, Class, and Gender * |
MUNM 13000 |
Music in Society |
|
MUNM 25100 |
Music and the Media |
|
MUNM 25600 |
Women in Popular Music: From Bessie Smith to MTV |
|
MUNM 25700 |
History of American Popular Song |
HPS 13000 |
Healthy Viewings: Media, Medicine, and Health |
SPMM 29500 |
Social Aspects of Sport* |
|
SPMM 39400 |
Sport in Film and Literature* |
|
Total, media and cultural studies area of inquiry |
21-22 |
*Course has prerequisite(s) that the student is responsible for meeting. (Note: Virtually all the prerequisites are minimal -- a specified number of courses in the liberal arts, class standing, etc.)
The organizational culture and technology area of inquiry provides students with the opportunity to explore this fundamental component of human experience -- the relationship between human agency and social structure -- by examining the impact of technology on organizations. Students draw links between the ways technology influences the flow of information and knowledge and the problem of organizational culture, including practices of influence, control, and conflict perpetuated in and through cultural forms. Coursework includes a focus on the capabilities of specific technologies of communication and opportunities for the examination of issues of organizational life, including the permeable boundary between organizations and society at large.
STCM 34000 |
Research and Evaluation in Communication Management and Design |
3 |
STCM 45000 |
Communication and Learning Technologies: Theory, Application, and Policy |
3 |
Choose one of the following courses:
COMP 10500 |
Introduction to Web Development* |
|
COMP 11000 |
Computers and Information Technology Systems* |
|
STCM 15000 |
Professional Applications of Technology* |
|
RLS 13900 |
Computer Applications in Recreation* |
|
PHED 13900 |
Computer Applications in Physical Education* |
|
HLTH 13900 |
Computer Applications in Health Education* |
|
EXSS 13900 |
Computer Applications in Exercise and Sport* |
3 |
Choose four courses from the following, at least two at level 3 or above, and no more than two from any department:
STCM 25100 |
Organizational Communication, Culture, and Conflict |
|
STCM 32000 |
Leadership Communication* |
|
STCM 36000 |
Communication in Culturally Diverse Organizations* |
TVR 32200 |
New Telecommunications Technologies* |
HPS 14000 |
Cyborgs, Clones, and Policy: New Technologies in Health and Medicine |
|
HPS 22500 |
Health Communication |
POLT 10200 |
Media and Politics |
SOCI 21200 |
Sociology of Work* |
|
SOCI 29300 |
Introduction to Social Institutions and Organizations* |
|
SOCI 30100 |
Technology and Society* |
MGMT 20600 |
Organizational Behavior and Management* |
|
MKTG 39100 |
Electronic Commerce: Legal Issues* |
|
MGMT 46000 |
Seminar in Organizational Development and Change* |
|
Total, organizational culture and technology area of inquiry |
21 |
*Course has prerequisite(s) that the student is responsible for meeting. (Note: Virtually all the prerequisites are minimal -- a specified number of courses in the liberal arts, class standing, etc.)
The visual and cinema studies area of inquiry focuses on how 21st-century visual communications structure meaning within social, political, historical, and aesthetic contexts. Within the last 20 years, the field of cinema studies has shifted away from an exclusive emphasis on the film itself as an isolated object toward critical theory and methodology that situate film, video art, installation, performance, theater, hybrid forms, photography, advertising, certain forms of fine art, and digital art forms as parts of a larger, more complex visual culture.
Visual and cinema studies is distinguished from the other three areas of inquiry in this major by its concentration on visually mediated communication forms. It emphasizes close textual analysis and historiographic research of both high and popular cultural media and visual forms.
The visual and cinema studies area of inquiry looks at on critical studies from the perspective of the humanities, rather than from a social science, perspective. It entails theory, history, and criticism courses from all five schools at Ithaca College.
CNPH 30100 |
Nonfiction Film Theory* or |
3 |
CNPH 30000 |
Fiction Film Theory* |
3 |
Choose six courses from the following, at least three at level 3 or above, and no more than three from any department:
CNPH 21400 |
Hollywood and American Film |
4 |
CNPH 24000 |
History of Photography* |
|
CNPH 30300 |
Images of Men and Women in Mass Media* |
|
CNPH 44000 |
Contemporary Photographic Issues* |
TVR 33500 |
Electronic Media Criticism* |
|
TVR 46000 |
Senior Seminar: Topics in Media Effects* |
ARTH 11000 |
Introduction to Art |
|
ARTH 11400 |
Architecture across Cultures |
|
ARTH 23300 |
Great Spaces: An Introduction to Urban Design* |
|
ARTH 25200 |
Twentieth-Century European Art* |
|
ARTH 28500 |
Art since 1960* |
|
ARTH 34100 |
Women Artists and Cultural Change* |
|
ARTH 34200 |
Images of Women in Western Art* |
ENGL 22500 |
Literary Modernism and the Visual Arts* |
PHIL 24000 |
Philosophy in Film* |
|
PHIL 32600 |
Seminar in Aesthetics* |
THPA 36400 |
Aesthetics and Criticism of Drama* |
|
Total, visual and cinema studies area of inquiry |
21-22 |
*Course has prerequisites that student is responsible for meeting. (Note: Virtually all the prerequisites are minimal -- a specified number of courses in the liberal arts, class standing, etc.)
Culture and communication majors are also required to complete an outside field that complements their area of inquiry -- an existing minor in another department or an outside field individually designed in consultation with the student's adviser and approved by the culture and communication coordinator. Some suggested minors are sociology, politics, psychology, art history, writing, history, philosophy, anthropology, and English, as well as various communication programs. Total credits in the minor or outside field must be 18 and may not include any courses selected for the major.
CLTC 10000 |
Introduction to Culture and Communication |
3 |
SPCM 12000 |
Communication, Culture, and Rhetoric |
3 |
CNPH 10100 |
Introduction to Film Aesthetics and Analysis |
3 |
TVR 12100 |
Introduction to Mass Media |
3 |
TVR 22000 |
Global Flow of Information |
3 |
STCM 20000 |
The Digital Workplace |
3 |
Core courses | 6 | |
Areas of inquiry requirements | 12 | |
One course at level 3 or above from the additional requirements |
|
|
Total, culture and communication minor |
21 |