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Different course options

Full time | Goldsmiths, University of London | 1 year | SEP-25

Study mode

Full time

Duration

1 year

Start date

SEP-25

Key information
DATA SOURCE : IDP Connect

Qualification type

MA - Master of Arts

Subject areas

Communication Studies Film / Video / Television Production

Course type

Taught

Course Summary

For over 25 years this MA has been actively interrogating the way the mediated world works. Discover the many roles of media and communications in your life and identity, across institutions and organisations and into wider cultures and societies through this pioneering programme.

  • There has never been a more exciting time to study media and communications. The digital age has transformed our experiences from shopping, to chatting to friends, to searching out information, to political activism. Our mediated worlds impact upon the rhythms and rituals of our daily lives changing the way we think about things, the way we create things, even the way we conceive of ourselves.
  • We are deeply entangled with media, in all their forms; One of our core concerns on this masters is to work out what the role the media play in the ways we live together – to provide a critical appraisal of our mediated existences. What does it mean to live in a digital age?

The questions we ask

  • Challenging assumptions is at the core of this course. We want rich, complex answers formed through theoretical and empirical work. To get to these we ask demanding questions. What happens to personal relationships in digital media environments? How do people affected by disasters use social media and other media to recover? How do the media influence our lives as citizens and our own (as well as others) political decisions? What should be the future of public service broadcasting? Do social media enable new forms of protest and political action?
  • Together we look at these kinds of issues to establish how the media are implicated in different aspects of life and the way the world functions.

The processes we use

  • We encourage you to look at issues holistically. Alongside lectures and seminars we run workshops, screenings and cultural trips to encourage you to explore the role of the media in our lives as widely as possible – from the individual and organisational level to corporations, the state, and the market across both the public and private sectors.
  • This is a theory-driven MA, but you also have the opportunity to do a practice option in a range of areas including Journalism, Campaigns and Design, and the Screen School. Plus you get the chance to apply your knowledge to a subject that ignites your interest and do your own independent research as part of your dissertation. From how people mediate the self through body piercing to how we form intimate relationships through social media, your dissertation topic is entirely up to you.

Careers

Graduates from this degree go into advertising, marketing and public relations, broadcasting and print media, social media, NGOs and intergovernmental organisations as well as the arts and heritage sector. Many of our graduates also move into research to apply the rigour of theoretical study to problems they encounter in their everyday lives.

Modules

The aim of this one-term module is to introduce and explore some of the recurring issues, debates and concepts, which link the fields of media and cultural studies from their early beginnings through to contemporary debates on inequalities, media power, and the difference media makes to our lives. These questions have become ever more prescient with the development and expansion of digital media leading to new forms of media and new ways of experiencing and intervening within our worlds: from hashtag activism to polymedia, from mass hysteria to people power, from moral panics and media contagions to new forms of networked virality, and from earlier debates on media power through to new forms of inequality that are embedded within media infrastructures. Our engagements with media are deeply emotional, whilst at the same time, they are practices through which we experience the interrelationship of politics, economic systems, histories, cultures, technologies and identities. Questions of how to engage with cultures of inequality have been at the heart of media and cultural studies, and this will be reflected throughout the module, where we aim to take an intersectional approach and are committed to developing an anti-racist curriculum. The module will combine new ways of understanding media, whilst providing the student with knowledge of key foundational debates that are still relevant now. The module forms the basis for the more specific analytical skills and knowledge you will develop in your options and your Dissertation.

Tuition fees

UK fees
Course fees for UK students

For this course (per year)

£11,170

International fees
Course fees for EU and international students

For this course (per year)

£20,460

Entry requirements

Students should have (or expect to be awarded) an undergraduate degree of at least upper second class standard in a relevant/related subject. Students might also be considered for some programmes if they aren’t a graduate or their degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that students have the ability to work at postgraduate level.