Fall 2020  |  COMM 3645W Section 001: How Pictures Persuade (17565)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
3 Credits
Grading Basis:
Student Option No Audit
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
Completely Online
Class Attributes:
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Online Course
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/08/2020 - 12/16/2020
Tue, Thu 09:45AM - 11:00AM
Off Campus
UMN REMOTE
Enrollment Status:
Closed (25 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
How words/pictures interact in graphic memoirs, political cartoons, and science to create/communicate meaning. How this interaction bears on public advocacy. Reading examples of comprehensive cognitive model of visual communication.
Class Notes:
This course is completely online in a synchronous format. The course will meet online at the scheduled times.
Class Description:

The class introduces students to theories and practices of visual communication in the United States. We examine theoretical approaches to understanding visual communication - semiotics, psychoanalysis, political economy, Marxism - that would enable us to analyze an image internally, as well as to place it in its historical, economic, political, and cultural context. We get to know historical moments of U.S. visual culture, such as Act Up! posters, street murals from around the Twin Cities, labor comic books from the Second World War, and the graffiti scene in New York.

The class works closely with the University of Minnesota Libraries Gorman Rare Art Book Collection which holds thousands of zines (http://gormanartspeccoll.tumblr.com/). Zines are usually, but not always, black and white publications that are cheaply made using a photocopier. Throughout the semester, the class works with Collection to create metadata (thorough description) of zines. This is great experience to include on your resumes!

Each of you will make your own zine that we will showcase at the end of the semester. The best zines will be permanently curated into the library's collection. For your zine you will research a topic of political, social, and economic importance - housing rights and gentrification; LGBTQ+ rights; reproductive rights; mass incarceration and the carceral state; racism and white supremacy; settler colonialism and genocide; misogyny, toxic masculinity, and rape culture; the electoral college; student debt; lobbying in Washington; fossil fuels and pollution - and visually communicate your argument to your imagined audience. Zines can include collages, writing, and hand-drawn images, photographs - anything you want to be in it - as long as it visually communicates your argument!
Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/17565/1209
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
9 December 2016

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