Please use simple English and deliberately keep some grammar and word choice mistake in the paper. - Management
Type of service: Research Proposal
Academic level: Undergraduate (1st and 2nd year)
Word count:600 words excluding reference list
Course name:Alternative media
Citation style:APA
Number of sources:3
Project Title/Topic:
Research Proposal on Major Paper plus Annotated Bibliography on 3 Scholarly Sources
Paper details/Instructions:
Dear writer,
In this order, you need to write 1 page proposal plus 1 page annotated bibliography with 3 sources
There are topics that listed in the attachment “MDSC61-W2019_MajorPaper”, you can decide the topic.
I also upload the “syllabus” for your use.
Instructions for Research Proposal and Annotated Bibliography
Your proposal should provide a brief outline of the topic you intend to explore in your final. A good proposal does three things: (1) it should identify and describe the primary research question animating your investigation; (2) it should provide a justification for why this question is relevant within the context of this course; and, (3) it should provide an outline of how your paper proposes to investigate this question. The annotated bibliography should have 3 scholarly sources, none of which are assigned as course readings (you can use course readings and/or non-scholarly as sources for your final paper, but NOT for the proposal). Each should provide a properly formatted bibliographic entry bibliographic entry, a brief summary of the source, and a brief description of how it is appropriate to your chosen research topic.
Please use simple English and deliberately keep some grammar and word choice mistake in the paper.
Thanks a lot.
ALTERNATIVE MEDIA MDSC61H3
Major Essay Assignment
DUE DATES
Proposal and Annotated Bibliography 5\% of final grade
Length: 1.5 pages (not including headers) PLUS annotations
Final Paper 30\% of final grade Week 11 – Mar. 25
Length: 8 pages (not including headers and bibliography)
** Please know you may take a one week extension and hand your paper in week 12. Should you
do so, your paper will be returned with minimal comments. Also please know that this only applies
to the final paper and NOT the proposal.
This assignment is a standard academic essay. Your papers are expected to make use of original
research (i.e. you MUST go beyond the readings listed in the syllabus), develop an original insight or
perspective, and put forth an original and compelling argument.
Instructions for Research Proposal and Annotated Bibliography
Your proposal should provide a brief outline of the topic you intend to explore in your final. A good
proposal does three things: (1) it should identify and describe the primary research question
animating your investigation; (2) it should provide a justification for why this question is relevant
within the context of this course; and, (3) it should provide an outline of how your paper proposes
to investigate this question. The annotated bibliography should have 3 scholarly sources, none of
which are assigned as course readings (you can use course readings and/or non-scholarly as sources
for your final paper, but NOT for the proposal). Each should provide a properly formatted
bibliographic entry bibliographic entry, a brief summary of the source, and a brief description of
how it is appropriate to your chosen research topic.
Suggested Research Topics (you can decide the topic)
1) Profile an alternative media organization of your choice. Pay attention to its historical
development. What inspired its founders to create the organization? Does it cooperate with other
similar organizations? What sort of challenges has it faced over the years? What, exactly, makes it
alternative?
2) Compare similar alternative media organizations across national boundaries, history or
technologies. For example, how is community radio different in Canada and the United States? How
is pirate radio constituted differently in the UK and the US? How is alternative news podcasting
different from alternative or community radio?
3) Do an historical overview of a particular alternative media practice. What are the origins of this
particular practice? Are there related or similar practices in different media? Has there been any sort
of social, cultural, legal or economic resistance to the development and proliferation of this
practice? Be sure to provide a compelling argument as to why your chosen focus constitutes an
alternative media practice.
4) Explore the definitions of, and possible tensions surrounding, the idea of alternative media. What
do we actually mean by alternative media? Alternative to what? For whom? Be sure to reference at
least THREE definitions of alternative media (and the scholars who provide them) and include
concrete examples to illustrate your argument.
5) How has the Internet helped transform a particular alternative media practice? How has it
changed the conditions for practitioners or audiences? Has it made things easier, or more difficult?
In what ways? Be sure to clearly identify the media practice you are talking about, as well as
describe its history and the dynamics of change you are identifying. NOTE: This is NOT a general
question about how the Internet has changed the media. Be sure to focus on an alternative media
practice and be sure to provide a discussion of what makes this practice alternative in the first place.
6) Develop and propose your own topic. If you wish to do this, it is a very good idea to consult with
me before either part of the assignment is due.
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO SCARBOROUGH
DEPARTMENT OF ARTS, CULTURE & MEDIA
MDSC61H3 ALTERNATIVE MEDIA
Winter, 2019
Monday, 1 – 3PM
BV355
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course examines the history, organization and social role of a range of independent,
progressive, and oppositional media practices. It emphasizes the ways alternative media
practices, including the digital, are the product of and contribute to political movements
and perspectives that challenge the status quo of mainstream consumerist ideologies.
The course takes a broad view of the idea of alternative media. Specifically, it begins
with the question alternative to what? Alternative, by definition, means something along
the lines of different than the mainstream or different from that which predominates.
This course will approach this notion of alternative along four separate, but nonetheless
interconnected, lines:
• alternative content and perspectives
• alternative organizational & structural models
• alternative practices
• alternative technological configurations
ASSIGNMENTS (see weekly class schedule for due dates)
*** Detailed assignment sheets will be provided on Blackboard
1) Slow media assignment 15\% (of final grade)
3 page (or equivalent) exploration of a slow media practice of your choice
2) Reading analysis 15\%
2-2.5 page summary and analysis of selected weeks readings
3) Research essay 35\%
5\% 1 page proposal plus annotated bibliography with 3 sources
30\% 7-8 page final paper
4) Final exam 35\%
ASSIGNMENT FORMATS, DUE DATES AND LATENESS PENALTIES
All assignments are due AT THE BEGINNING of class. All assignments are expected to be
legible (e.g. in dark ink, on white paper, NOT printed out with empty toner cartridges,
etc.), properly identified and correctly stapled. All formal assignments must make
consistent use of an accepted citation format (preferably APA style). For information about
how to do this, please see http://ctl.utsc.utoronto.ca/twc/citations
There will be a penalty deduction of 2.5\% per day (including weekends) for late
assignments. To avoid extra late penalties, email a copy of the late assignment to me when
completed, and bring a paper copy next class. We will NOT be responsible for printing out
copies of assignments for students, stapling them, if your email file is corrupt or for your
failure to attach the file. Failure to submit a paper copy after having submitted an email
copy of any assignment will constitute failure to submit the assignment.
Deadline extensions will be granted only for a compelling reason and with authorized
documentation. Such reasons include illness (documented with a Doctors note) or family
emergency. Extensions will NOT be granted for reasons such as computer crashes or
breakdowns, inability to print the file on time, or other such technical problems. ALWAYS
MAKE SURE TO BACKUP YOUR FILES AS YOU WORK!
CLASSROOM CONDUCT AND COMPORTMENT
Students are expected to assist in maintaining a classroom environment that is conducive
to learning. In order to assure that all students have an opportunity to gain from time spent
in class, and unless otherwise approved by the instructor, silence your mobile phones and
put them away at the beginning of every class and use your notebook computers for
classroom purposes only. Inappropriate behavior, making offensive remarks, or engaging
in any other form of distraction in the classroom shall result in, at the minimum, a request
to leave.
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES AND ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
It is the student’s responsibility to be aware of policies, procedures and deadlines that are
in effect during their attendance at the University of Toronto. It is also the student’s
responsibility to attend classes regularly, to keep their work up to date, and to complete
assignments as required. Academic Integrity is essential to the pursuit of learning and
scholarship, and breaches in the form of plagiarism and cheating are taken very seriously.
All violations of the standards of integrity found in the university’s Code of Behaviour on
Academic Matters will be reported. Please familiarize yourself with aspects of academic
integrity and methods of proper citation:
How not to plagiarize:
http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/advice/using-sources/how-not-to-plagiarize
How to use and cite sources:
http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/twc/using-and-citing-sources-0
Information regarding academic integrity:
http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/aacc/academic-integrity
CONTACTING PROFESSOR KAYE
I encourage you to contact me regarding issues involving the course, including questions
about material covered and or your own progress. This is best done during my weekly
office hours or, if those are not convenient, at another scheduled time. Email is not an
option for questions where a proper answer requires a discussion. If you do send one, I
will try to respond within 72 hours however this is not always possible. I am absolutely not
available or accessible on weekends. When communicating with me via email you must
use your U of T email account and address, use the course number (i.e. MDSC61) in the
subject line, and clearly identify yourself in the main body of the message. Please address
your message Dear Dr. Kaye. Please note it is my policy to not discuss grades over email.
WEEKLY CLASS SCHEDULE
Week 1, Jan. 7 What do we mean by Alternative?
This week introduces the idea of alternative media by addressing the basic and
fundamental question of what we mean by alternative. Put another way, the key question
is Alternative to what?
Hamilton, James (2000) Alternative Media: Conceptual Difficulties, Critical Possibilities.
Journal of Communication Inquiry. 24(4), pp.357-378.
Sandoval, Marisol and Christian Fuchs (2010) Towards a critical theory of alternative
media. Telematics and Informatics. 27(2), pp.141–150.
Week 2, Jan. 14 Slow Media as Alternative Practice
What do we mean by slow media? Has the rush to embrace all things digital led us to
ignore a whole host of slower, analog alternatives? How do these alternatives differ from
their faster, digital counterparts? What can they teach us about our own media practices?
Rauch, J. (2011) The Origin of Slow Media: Early Diffusion of a Cultural Innovation
through Popular and Press Discourse, 2002-2010. Transformations: Journal of Media &
Culture. iss. #20. http://www.transformationsjournal.org/wp-
content/uploads/2016/12/Rauch_Trans20.pdf
http://en.slow-media.net/manifesto
http://slow-media.org/2009/12/students-slow-media-experiments-the-weirdest-three-hours-
i-ever-spent.html
http://slow-media.org/2010/05/slow-media-experiment-ii.html
Week 3, Jan. 21 From Dada to Dilla: Appropriation as Alternative Practice
What do we mean by cultural practices of appropriation? How are they to be considered
as alternative? What are problems are posed by the reappropriation of such practices back
into the cultural mainstream?
Schaefer, Janek (2001) Audio Oh!: Appropriation, Accident and Alteration. Leonardo
Music Journal. 11. pp. 71-76.
Zimmermann, Patricia R. (2006) JUST SAY NO: Negativlands No Business. Cultural
Studies. 20 (2/3), March/May. pp.316-322.
videos: RIP: A Remix Manifesto
http://films.onf.ca/rip-a-remix-manifesto/
Negativland – Gimme The Mermaid
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTrHwH2gEY8
Week 4, Jan. 28 Noise, Glitch and Error as Alternative Digital Culture
ASSIGNMENT DUE: Research Paper Proposal And Annotated Bibliography
If traditional cultural production is predicated on the idea of a complete, finished and
perfect final product, what happens when we start consciously basing our work on
mistakes? Could errors, glitches, skips and noise become the basis for alternative cultural
production in the digital age?
Menkman, Rosa (2010) Glitch Studies Manifesto. http://rosa-
menkman.blogspot.com/2010/02/glitch-studies-manifesto.html
Kelly, Caleb (2009) Cracked Media: The Sound of Malfunction. chap. 1, Recording and
Noise: Approaches to Cracked Media. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Week 5, Feb. 4 Open Source Culture and the Idea of the Digital Commons
What is free software? How does it differ from open source software? How do both of
these models of software production and distribution present an alternative to the
predominant mode of commercial, proprietary software production?
Ghosh, Rishab A., Rüdiger Glott, Bernhard Krieger and Gregorio Robles (2005) Free
software developers: Who, how and why. in The Economics of the Digital Society. L.
Soete and B. ter Weel (eds.). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
Stallman, Richard (2010) Free Software, Free Society: Selected Essays of Richard M.
Stallman 2nd ed. chap. 1, The Free Software Definition and chap. 2, The GNU Project.
book available at http://shop.fsf.org/product/free-software-free-society/
Vaidhyanathan, Siva (2012) Open Source as Culture/Culture as Open Source. in The
Social Media Reader. M. Mandiberg (ed.). New York: New York University Press. pp.24-
31. Electronic copies of this book are available at
http://archive.org/details/TheSocialMediaReader
Week 6, Feb. 11 Social Networks, The Interface and Alternatives
ASSIGNMENT DUE: Reading Analysis
How do digital technologies and services mediate online social interaction? Does this
mediation create expectations about how such interaction should occur? What might
alternatives to mainstream social networking platform look like, and how might they
mediate interaction in a way that empowers, rather than exploits, its users?
Langlois, Ganaele (2013) Social Media, or Towards a Political Economy of Social Life.
pp.50-60.
AND
Sevignani, Sebastian (2013) Facebook vs. Diaspora: A Critical Study. pp.323-327.
Both are found in G. Lovink and M. Rasch (eds.) Unlike Us Reader: Social Media
Monopolies and Their Alternatives. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures.
*** A free PDF copy of the Unlike Us Reader is available at
http://www.networkcultures.org/_uploads/\%238UnlikeUs.pdf
Rokeby, David (1998) The Construction of Experience: Interface as Content
http://www.davidrokeby.com/experience.html
Week 7, Feb. 25 Indymedia
What is Indymedia, and where did it emerge? What are the relationships between
Indymedia practices and practitioners and anti-capitalist and anti-globalization social
movements? How does the content, form and social organization of Indymedia differ from
the mainstream media?
Ballvé, Teo (2004) Another Media Is Possible. NACLA Report on the Americas. 37(4),
Jan/Feb.
Giraud, Eva (2014) Has radical participatory online media really ‘failed’? Indymedia and
its legacies. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into
New Media Technologies. 20(4), 419–437.
Kidd, Dorothy (2003) The Independent Media Center: A new model. Media
Development. 50(4).
Pickard, Victor W. (2006) Assessing the Radical Democracy of Indymedia: Discursive,
Technical, and Institutional Constructions. Critical Studies in Media Communication.
23(1), March. pp.19-38.
Week 8, Mar. 4 Zines, Blogs and Subcultures
What are zines? How are they implicated in processes of identity formation? How are
they related to other media forms such as music and visual art? How do they help weave
subcultures together across time and space? Are blogs the zines of the 21st Century?
Atton, Chris (2002) chap. 2, What Use is a Zine? Identity-building and Social Signification
in Zine Culture. Alternative Media. London: Sage. pp.54-79.
Jetto, Beatrice (2010) Music Blogs, Music Scenes, Sub-cultural Capital: Emerging Practices
in Music Blogs
Week 9, Mar. 11 Independent Music and Alternative Distribution
Does where we buy (or how we acquire) our music have anything to do with the actual
types of music that we listen to? How have alternative and non-commercial musical forms
survived and thrived outside the mainstream? In a period of flux such as today, where
mainstream channels of distribution are being challenged by emerging online forms, is
there the possibility for new musical forms and genres flourish?
McLeod, Kembrew (2005) MP3s Are Killing Home Taping: The Rise of Internet
Distribution and Its Challenge to the Major Label Music Monopoly. Popular Music and
Society. 28(4), October. pp. 521–531.
Harrison, Anthony Kwame (2006) ‘Cheaper than a CD, plus we really mean it’: Bay Area
underground hip hop tapes as subcultural artefacts. Popular Music. 25(2). pp. 283–301.
Jones, Simon (1995) Rocking the House: Sound System Cultures and the Politics of Space.
Journal of Popular Music Studies. 7(1), March. pp.1-24.
Week 10, Mar. 18 Alternative Radio
Radio is a powerful medium, one with a long history of alternative forms and uses. This
week will explore and compare a number of these, including pirate radio, community
radio and low-power microradio.
Boyd, Douglas A. (1986) Pirate Radio in Britain: A Programming Alternative. Journal of
Communication. 36(2), Spring.
Dunbar-Hester, Christina (2008) Geeks, Meta-Geeks, and Gender Trouble: Activism,
Identity, and Low-power FM Radio. Social Studies of Science. 38(2), April. pp. 201–232
Price-Davies, Eryl and Jo Tacchi (2001) Community Radio In A Global Context: A
Comparative Analysis. London: AMARC. Introduction, chap. 7 Comparative Analysis
and chap. 8 Recommendations.
http://www.amarc.org/documents/articles/Community_Radio_Global.pdf
Week 11, Mar. 25 Ethnic Media as Alternative Media
ASSIGNMENT DUE: Slow Media Project
ASSIGNMENT DUE: Final Research Paper
What place do ethnic media have in our overall media landscape? If media in a
democratic society are supposed to be representative, why do we need ethnic media?
What sort of alternatives do ethnic media provide?
Ojo, Tokunbo (2006) Ethnic print media in the multicultural nation of Canada: A case
study of the black newspaper in Montreal. Journalism. 7(3), pp. 343–361.
Deuze, Mark (2006) Ethnic media, community media and participatory culture.
Journalism. 7(3), pp. 262-280.
Week 12, Apr. 1 Self-Produced Media as Alternative Media?
In an era where media production technologies and distribution systems are more
accessible than ever, we now have the ability to circumvent mainstream media oligopolies
on our own. But is this enough for us to consider such self-production practices as
alternative media?
Croteau, David (2006) The Growth of Self-Produced Media Content and the Challenge to
Media Studies. Critical Studies in Media Communication. 23(4), October. pp. 340-344.
van Dijck, José (2006) Users like you? Theorizing agency in user-generated content.
Media, Culture & Society. 31(1), pp. 41-58.
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