Theories of Spectatorship Spring 2016Main MenuCourse DescriptionHow do we engage with media? #middspekClass Componentsall the moving partsRequired BooksTextual Poachers & Millennial FandomReadings & Screenings (aka the heart of the syllabus! look here! o_0)MonthlyLouisa Stein0f4cec8037f0e569727cade2e4602d43fe873edc
Buster Keaton in Sherlock Jr.
12016-02-09T10:39:39-08:00Louisa Stein0f4cec8037f0e569727cade2e4602d43fe873edc81201Buster Keaton in Sherlock Jr.plain2016-02-09T10:39:40-08:00Louisa Stein0f4cec8037f0e569727cade2e4602d43fe873edc
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1media/Buster in Sherlock Jr.pngmedia/buster2.jpg2016-02-09T10:41:37-08:00Welcome to #MiddSpek5Welcome to #MiddSpekbook_splash2016-02-09T10:59:04-08:00How do we engage with media? Is our experience of media in this digital modern day radically different than it was when film was itself a new medium? What does it mean to be a fan? Have our notions of fans and fandom changed over the past decades? How do gender, class, and race inform cultural notions of media audiences? In this class, we’ll consider key theoretical readings and approaches to studying spectators, viewers, audiences, fans, and anti-fans across the history of the moving image. We will also interrogate our own position as spectators, viewers, consumers, and fans in media culture.