Introduction to geomedia studies
7.5 ECTS creditsThe course provides a common knowledge base for students from different subjects and prepares them for later courses and studies. The course introduces key concepts and theories in the main areas of human geography and media and communication studies, and an overview of the development, main features, and current research topics and debates of geomedia research. Media and communication are discussed in terms of representations, institutions, and infrastructures related to various human geography conceptualisations of time, space, place, and mobility. In this way, the course content shows how geomedia combines research traditions and epistemologies that have been separate historically. The course also includes a critical introduction to the recent transformations of technology and society that underpin the "spatial turn" in media research and the "communicative turn" in human geography. Students practise identifying research topics in media and communication geography, perform critical analyses of current social issues, and relate such issues to general theoretical contexts.
Progressive specialisation:
A1N (has only first鈥恈ycle course/s as entry requirements)
Education level:
Master's level
Admission requirements
90 ECTS credits of Human Geography or Media and Communication Studies, including at least 30 ECTS credits at the G2F level and a degree project/essay of at least 15 ECTS credits at the advanced level, or equivalent, plus upper secondary school level English B/6.
Selection:
Selection is usually based on your grade point average from upper secondary school or the number of credit points from previous university studies, or both.
This course is included in the following programme
- Master programme in Geomedia Studies: Media, Mobility and Spatial Planning (studied during year 1)
More information
Choose occasion
Campus, 100%
Options
- Start Autumn 2024
- Mode of study Campus
- Language English
- Course code MKA100
- Application code KAU-43987
- Study pace 100% (Day)
- Study period week 36鈥40
- Schedule
- Introductory Information
- Reading list