12667 - Sociology of Communication (2) (A-E)

Academic Year 2022/2023

  • Docente: Pina Lalli
  • Credits: 6
  • Language: Italian
  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Communication Sciences (cod. 8885)

Learning outcomes

Students learn tools to observe the contemporary complexity of the public space of communication, since it includes many forms, channels and sources of information, but also unequal opportunities to access and to practice them.

Course contents

- Social theories and models of communication

- Communication and interaction in the everyday life

- Interpersonal, mediated and online mediated communication

- Social forms of communication and technological developments: from oral societies to digital societies

- Media, digital media and interaction: how to study the social effects of media and hybrid media

- Case and empirical analysis of the different forms of contemporary communication

Readings/Bibliography

FOR INCOMING ERASMUS AND OVERSEAS STUDENTS

[changes are possible at the beginning of the course on September]

1. E. Goffman, "Interaction Order", in American Sociological Review, vol. 48, 1983, pp. 1-17: JSTOR address, available by EZproxy via studio.unibo keys]

2. S. Moscovici, Notes towards a description of Social Representations, "European Journal of Social Psychology", 18 (3), 1988, pp. 211-250)

3. A. Schütz, "The well informed citizen. An Essay on the Social Distribution of Knowledge", in Social Research 13, 4 (1946), pp. 463-78

4. J. B. Thompson, Mediated Interaction in the Digital Age, in Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 37(1) (2020), pp. 3–28, DOI:10.1177/0263276418808592 [access at home by EZproxy
(for French speakers: J. B. Thompson, "La nouvelle visibilité", in Réseaux, 2005/1 (n° 129-130), pp. 59-87)

5. C Gius, P. Lalli, “I loved her so much, but I killed her” Romantic love as a representational frame for intimate partner femicide in three Italian newspapers, "ESSACHESS - Journal for Communication Studies", vol 7, No 2(14), 2014 (open access in the journal website)

6. P. Lalli, When Communication Goes with Inclusion: A Case Analysis on Participatory Experiences in the Municipality of Bologna, in Communication with the Public, edited by A. Jenei, Budapest, AdLibrum, 2012, pp. 142-160 [or for French speakers: N. Smyrnaios, L'effet GAFAM: stratégies et logique de l'oligopole de l'internet, "Communication & Langages", vol. 2016, n. 188, pp. 61-83 (preprint)

7. At least 1 chapter from: d. boyd, It's Complicated, Foundation Philip Hamilton McMillan of the class of 1894, Yale College, Creative Commons

8. P. Lalli, C. Capelli, “Young people as “glocal” citizens of the world. News media representations of youth in mainstream and digital native media”, in G. Rocha, R. Lalanda, P. de Medeiros (eds.), Juventude(s): Movimentos Globais e Desafios Futuros, Vila Nova de Famalicão, Húmus, 2021, chapter 1, pp. 7-42 [the ebook is available in open access at the following address, where students can extract the first chapter: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/6326] 

The exam for 12 CFU is the same (it is an integrated course).

Only Erasmus and Overseas incoming students can make the difference if they wish to choose only the 6 ECTS (i.-e. only Sociology of communication (1). In this case the syllabus includes the above listed readings from 1 to 5.

Teaching methods

Lessons, and interactive discussions in class.

Optional participation to workshops in the second part in order to produce a brief empirical case analysis for the exam.

Assessment methods

Incoming Erasmus+ and exchange students can attend lessons and interactive workshops where the teacher introduces the methodological tools for a case analysis.

In fact, the attending Erasmus and exchange students can agree with the teacher one specific option for the exam: i.e. a written Italian or English or French or Spanish paper based on case empirical analysis coming from the lectures and the readings.

As an alternative, any student can participate to the written exam with closed and open-ended questions on the suggested readings that will be published in the Italian version of this page at the beginning of the course (foreign students can answer in one of the following languages: English, French, Spanish).

Teaching tools

Slides and videos for visualization in class, and future indications for workshops and papers in the  "spazio virtuale" of the course. 

Office hours

See the website of Pina Lalli

SDGs

Quality education Gender equality Partnerships for the goals

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.