Teacher
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Stolfi Melissa
(syllabus)
The course in Media Sociology aims to provide students with a knowledge of the main social and cultural changes that followed the evolution of "traditional" media (press, radio, television) and later of the new media, focusing on the relationship between technology, individual and society. The first part of the course is focused on the sociological studies developed during the 20th century in concomitance with the development of mass media, paying attention the main actors involved in the communication processes: the sender, the message, the receiver, and the effects. A further focus is set on the social, cultural, individual and interpersonal transformations due to the development of the Internet and the social network sites, which are as spaces opening up to new opportunities but at the same time as agents of new inequalities. The second part focuses on the history and development of the television, and specifically of a television genre that is prominent on the Italian scenario: the political talk show. By analysing the main transformations of the “democracy” (democrazia dei partiti, democrazia dello spettacolo, teledemocrazia, democrazia del pubblico, postdemocrazia, democrazia ibrida), the format (puro, impuro, ibrido) and taking into account the arise of new media and new form of participation, students can reflect on the evolution not only of the relationship between politics and television, but also between politics, television and citizenship.
(reference books)
1. Paccagnella, L. (2020). Sociologia della comunicazione nell'era digitale (nuova edizione - copertina azzurra). Bologna: il Mulino (solo capitoli 3, 4, 5). 2. Novelli, E. (2016). La democrazia del talk-show. Storia di un genere che ha cambiato la televisione, la politica, l’Italia. Roma: Carocci. 3. Ulteriori materiali didattici integrativi saranno comunicati dal docente durante il corso.
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