Teaching
| Tara runs two first year courses at the University of Brighton: Creative Industries and Thinking Pop. |
Creative Industries (2007-)
Aims
Creative Industries investigates one of the policy and academic growth area in the last ten years. The module explores if, how and why ‘creativity’ operates in the post-September 11 social and economic environment. The students explore the nature of creativity and the creative industries. We investigate if economic growth and development and social justice be found in these industries.
Learning Outcomes/Objectives
By the end of the module students should be able to:
- Define and evaluate Creative Industries.
- Ask why the Creative Industries have grown in visibility in the last ten years.
- Postulate the future directions, potentials and problems for Creative Industries.
- Develop diverse modes of reading and research, accessing policy documents, critical theory, journalism and popular culture
- Develop diverse modes of writing, including policy analysis, theoretical interpretation, historiography and cultural critique
- Develop the skills and knowledge to not only critique creative industries, but to become active workers in these fields
Thinking Pop (2008-)
Aims
Thinking Pop is not only the title of module, but a confirmation of an agenda for the future of Media Studies. The aim of Thinking Pop is to ensure that students have an awareness of the relationship between research and writing, with some knowledge of the publishing industries. However the second aim is to assist students in writing (about) popular culture in a thoughtful, considered and scholarly fashion.
Learning Outcomes/Objectives
By the end of the module students should be able to:
- Grasp the relationship between reading and writing.
- Understand the challenges to the publishing industry through user-generated content
- Examine slices of popular culture and be able to place them in a resonant context
- Write about popular culture, using research not opinion
- Write a creative non-fiction article and an accompanying exegesis OR a book proposal
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Tara is the Programme Leader of the Master of Arts Creative Media.
She teaches four courses in this programme, in both on campus and distance education modes, and participates in Practising Media Research, coordinated by Dr David Horner.
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Media Literacies (2007-)
Aims
This module has three aims:
- To define media literacy and move this term through a series of contexts.
- To grasp the complex history of literacy debates, and how media studies professionals can intervene in these debates. Literacy models will be introduced.
- To evaluate the appropriateness in deploying particular media platforms in specific locations.
Objectives
By the end of the module students will be able to:
- Apply workable definitions of media literacy in educational, workplace and leisure-based contexts
- Be able to participate in debates about media literacy.
- Position media literacy theories in the paradigm of media studies.
- To generate a reflexive model for media literacy that can move through analogue and digital, old and new media environments.
Offered on campus and through distance education by Professor Tara Brabazon
City Imaging (2008-)
Aims
The module has three aims:
- To construct definitions of city imaging utilizing interdisciplinary approaches.
- To investigate international city imaging strategies, policies and models to develop strategies for intervention and urban regeneration.
- To apply city imaging models and strategies for a research project.
Objectives
By the end of the module students will be able to:
- Define city imaging and have knowledge of its international application.
- Evaluate international strategies for city imaging, assessing their effectiveness in transforming social policy and regional development.
- Recognize international best practice and be able to apply these models to new environments.
Offered on campus and through distance education by Professor Tara Brabazon
Sonic Media (2008-)
Aims
This module has three aims:
- To define sonic media and auditory cultures
- To assess the strengths and weaknesses of oral sources in research projects
- To understand the spectrum of sonic media through analogue and digital platforms
Objectives
By the end of the module students should be able to:
- Use oral testimony and oral history to both complement and challenge visual sources of communication
- Define, deploy and understand sonic media, including popular music.
- Be able to manage the semiotic ambiguity of sonic media and to write about it with clarity, analysis and depth, rather than subjectivity and opinion.
Offered on campus and through distance education by Professor Tara Brabazon
Teaching, Learning and Writing through Popular Culture (2008-)
Aims
This module probes the place of popular culture in teaching and learning, assessing best practice in the use of popular culture in Media Studies curriculum. The second aim of this module is for students to learn to write about and through popular culture.
Objectives
By the end of the module students should be able to:
- Define popular culture and be able to understand debates about cultural value
- Gain expertise in popular cultural studies
- Track the controversies about popular culture in the curriculum
- Understand the challenges of writing about popular culture.
- Practise writing about popular culture
Offered on campus and through distance education by Professor Tara Brabazon
Practising Media Research (2007-)
Aims
This module assists students in understanding a series of research methods, demonstrating how they are applied by practitioners. The aim is to ensure that students can assess and select which methods are appropriate for particular projects. The attention is placed on the most common methods deployed in contemporary Media Studies, from particularly relevant archives through to specific sites and opportunities for dissemination.
Objectives
By the end of the module students should be able to:
- Recognize and apply a series of research methods
- Evaluate the appropriateness of particular methods for specific projects, contexts and topics
- Be able to search for sources on a particular research method and evaluate their significance to a specific project
- Learn to write about methods and integrate these methods into a longer research project
Taught on campus and through distance education with Dr David Horner, Dr Peter Day, Dr Julie Doyle and Ms Irmi Karl.
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Media and Popular Culture (2006)
[Topic outline and sonic sessions]
Aim
To consider how the concept of 'popular culture' and the phenomena it is used to describe
are best understood within the framework of media studies.
Objectives
By the end of the module the students should be able to:
- demonstrate a knowledge and understanding of a wide range of media 'popular cultural'
forms and critically evaluate the relationship between media form, cultural content and
audience
- understand, compare and evaluate a variety of methods and empirical studies relating to
media institutions, texts and audiences, in relation to popular culture
- critically evaluate contemporary media developments in relation to concepts of popular
culture
Teaching staff
Professor Stuart Laing, Professor Tara Brabazon and Ms Irmi Karl
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Creative Industries,
MCC106 (2006)
[Topic outline and sonic sessions]
Creative Industries explores
if, how and why creativity operates in our new social and economic environment. The
shadow of terrorism and September 11 created a brittle and divisive political environment,
which shades and darkens many of the topics in this course. Our aim is to ask what is
creativity? What are the creative industries? Can economic growth and
developmentand social justicebe found in these industries? During the semester, student's analytical
sensibilities will be sharpened and taken-for-granted truths probed. The course
develops skills in analysis, research, writing and, most importantly,
interpretation. Subject Aims Form and
Content - Define and evaluate Creative Industries;
- Ask why the Creative Industries have
grown in visibility in the last ten years; and
- Postulate the future directions,
potentials and problems for Creative Industries
Skill Development
- Develop diverse modes of reading and
research, accessing policy documents, critical theory, journalism and popular culture;
- Develop diverse modes of writing,
including policy analysis, theoretical interpretation, historiography and cultural critique;
and
- Develop the skills and knowledge to
not only critique creative industries, but to become active workers in these fields.
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Cultural Studies, Creativity &
Change, COM102 (2005)
Cultural Studies, Creativity & Change was a
course offered for one semester at Murdoch University, in 2005. Cultural Studies is a
changeable, dynamic method for understanding the world. Particularly, in the last few
years, 'creativity' and 'creative industries' have becomes phrases to watch. We move
from fashion to tourism through to magazine readerships, sport and youth culture. We
explore the changes to work, leisure and lifestyle. The key interests remain the
same. How does an individual become part of society? How do we know if we belong
or are excluded from wider society? Why does a piece of music, an item of fashion or a
football hold such meaning? Is it right to use popular culture to build and mould an
identity?
Subject
Aims
- Introduce students to the history of
contemporary cultural studies;
- Explore the diverse meanings of
creativity, with attention to the creative industries;
- Investigate the relationship between
ideas and their applications; and
- Develop abilities in analysis,
argument and interpretation.
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Cultural Difference & Diversity, COM267/COM477 (1997-
2005)
Cultural Difference & Diversity
examines a diverse, fluid and politically resonant field of knowledges, engaging a myriad of
approaches, ideologies and discourses. In this course, students do not have to 'factor
out’ who they are. Instead, we build on your interests and concerns. CDD offers a close engagement with
academic research and contemporary social issues, preparing students for further units in
communication and cultural studies. CDD investigates the contemporary political and
theoretical dilemmemailircling identity. It is as current as this morninemailadlines and
rigorous in its engagement with the past. We explore topics ranging from multiculturalism to
Generation X, from lipstick feminism (red of course) to inscriptions of blackness.
Our textual sites include
popular journalism, music, film, television and advertising. Part of the meta-agenda of this
course is to teach students how to handle (and control) this range of textual and
theoretical material. Consequentley, the reading in this course is diverse and challenging.
We sing along with the Spice Girls, throw stones with the Suffragettes, explore the meanings
of blackness and ask if we are still living in a classed society.
Selected
posters promoting CDD:

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Introduction to Cultural Studies, COM102 (1997-2004)
The spectrum of topics encountered in
Introduction to Cultural Studies was diverse: from fashion to tourism and Star Trek
to magazine readerships and youth culture. Yet the key interests remained the same. How does
an individual become part of society? How does a text function socially and politically? Is
culture a legitimate basis for the formation of communities? ICS charted one of the academic success stories
of the last thirty years. Having its origins at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary
Cultural Studies, the paradigm of Cultural Studies has grown in its ambitions and
popularity. It is now taught in undergraduate programmes throughout the United States,
Canada, Australia and New Zealand. In many ways, Cultural Studies has 'followed the flag' of
the old British Empire. In ICS at Murdoch University we explore the strengths, problems and
changes to this field of inquiry, and evaluate its relevance to contemporary Australian
life. During the
semester, student's analytical sensibilities were sharpened, and taken-for-granted truths
were probed. The course developed skills in analysis, research, writing and, most
importantly, critical thinking.
Selected
posters promoting ICS:

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