Veidlapa Nr. M-3 (8)
Study Course Description

Theories of New Media and Internet

Main Study Course Information

Course Code
KSK_115
Branch of Science
Media and communications
ECTS
3.00
Target Audience
Communication Science
LQF
Level 7
Study Type And Form
Full-Time

Study Course Implementer

Course Supervisor
Structure Unit Manager
Structural Unit
Faculty of Social Sciences
Contacts

Dzirciema street 16, Rīga, szf@rsu.lv

About Study Course

Objective

To develop theoretical knowledge of students in the field of new media, to master basic network theories and their history, to promote the understanding of network and society as a network, to teach skills to use network mapping programmes in society and communication research, to master competences in current modern technology and network development trends and related social processes.

Preliminary Knowledge

Media theories.

Learning Outcomes

Knowledge

1.Masters understand the specifics of new media communication in the context of traditional media communication, find their way around new media and network communication theoretical models and know concepts of main theorists.

Skills

1.Masters are able to use specific properties of new media in their communication practice and communication planning and management. Masters skilfully communicate in the internet using multimedia and network structure properties for their purposes.

Competences

1.Students are competent to use, create and analyse networks.

Assessment

Individual work

Title
% from total grade
Grade
1.

Individual work

-
-
Studies of literature, mapping task, final paper – report. In order to evaluate the quality of the study course as a whole, the student must fill out the study course evaluation questionnaire on the Student Portal.

Examination

Title
% from total grade
Grade
1.

Examination

-
-
Attendance of lectures and seminars and quality of answers, quality of the work and report, quality of examination answers.

Study Course Theme Plan

FULL-TIME
Part 1
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

New media theories.
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

New media theories.
  1. Class/Seminar

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

New media principles and laws.
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Network theories.
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Network theories.
  1. Class/Seminar

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Network mapping.
  1. Class/Seminar

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Network mapping.
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Translocal communities and local nets. Creative and social networks.
  1. Lecture

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Translocal communities and local nets. Creative and social networks.
  1. Class/Seminar

Modality
Location
Contact hours
On site
Auditorium
2

Topics

Mobile and hybrid networks. Current modern network community problems. Final presentations.
Total ECTS (Creditpoints):
3.00
Contact hours:
20 Academic Hours
Final Examination:
Exam (Written)

Bibliography

Required Reading

1.

Manovičs, Ļevs. Jauno mediju valoda. (tulk.) Rīga: RIXC, 2006.

2.

Wardrip-Fruin, Noah, Nick Montfort (ed.). New Media Reader. The MIT Press, 2003

3.

Castells, Manuel. The Rise of the Network Society. Vol. 1: The Information Age. Economy, Society and Culture. Blackwell Publishers, 2000 (1st ed. – 1996).

4.

Lovink, Geert. Zero Comments: Blogging and Critical Internet Culture. Routledge, 2007

5.

Kluitenberg, Eric. Delusive Spaces: Essays on Culture, Media and Technology. Amsterdam: NAi Publisher, 2008.

6.

Freeman, Linton. The Development of Social Network Analysis. Vancouver: Empirical Pres, 2006

7.

Rheingold, Howard. Smart mobs: The Next Social Revolution. 2002

8.

Rossiter, Ned. Organized Networks: Media Theory, Creative Labour, New Institutions. NAi Publishers, Rotterdam and the Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, 2006

9.

Sassen, Saskia. Electronic markets and activist networks: the weight of social logics in digital formations. In: Latham, Robert and Saskia Sassen (eds.). Digital Formations: IT and New Architectures in the Global Realm. Princeton University Press, 2005.

10.

Krebs, Valdis. Social Network Analysis, A Brief Introduction.

11.

Varnelis, Kazys. Network Culture.

12.

Chun, W. H. K. Updating to remain the same: Habitual new media. MIT press, 2016

13.

Duhé, S. An overview of new media research in public relations journals from 1981 to 2014. Public Relations Review, (2015). 41(2), 153-169.

14.

Siapera, E. Understanding new media. Sage, 2017.

15.

Schroeder, R. (2018). Towards a theory of digital media. Information, Communication & Society, 21(3), 323-339.

16.

Wei, R., & Xu, L. Z. New Media and Politics: A Synopsis of Theories, Issues, and Research. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication, 2019

17.

Couldry, N. Actor‐Network Theory. The International Encyclopedia of Communication Theory and Philosophy (2016): 1-7.

Additional Reading

1.

del Fresno Garcia, M., Daly, A. J., & Segado Sanchez-Cabezudo, S. (2016). Identifying the new Influences in the Internet Era: Social Media and Social Network Analysis. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, (153).

2.

Dourish, P. Algorithms and their others: Algorithmic culture in context. Big Data & Society, 2016. 3(2),

3.

Lenton, T. M., & Latour, B. Gaia 2.0. Science, 2018. 361(6407), 1066-1068.