Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0199 - Hashtags, Memes, and Trolls: Politics in the Age of Social Media
Hashtags, Memes, and Trolls
Spring
2020
1
4.00
Professor Loza
01:00PM-02:20PM TU;01:00PM-02:20PM TH
Hampshire College
331424
Emily Dickinson Hall 2;Emily Dickinson Hall 2
slHA@hampshire.edu
Although early internet theorists imagined the World Wide Web as a wild frontier where only minds mattered, social media testifies to the lasting force of bodily inscriptions like race, gender, sexuality, dis/ability, and class. In this course, we will consider how identity shapes how we communicate, debate, collaborate, and mobilize online. We will investigate how different populations engage with digital technologies and social media in particular; how such environments expedite stereotypes and construct difference; and how online platforms like YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook are tools of social justice as well as replicators of reactionary ideologies. Our critical arsenal will draw upon Media Studies, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Cultural Studies, and Ethnic Studies. We will apply these theories to current events online. Throughout our examination of the politics of hashtags, memes, and trolls, we will foreground the ways that power relations continue to inform how bodies travel through the digital realm.
Power, Community and Social Justice Independent Work Multiple Cultural Perspectives Writing and Research In this course, students can expect to spend 8 to 10 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.