Media and Power in Latin America: From Quipus to Twitter
HIST 321
Spring 2019 not offered
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Crosslisting:
LAST 320 |
This interdisciplinary seminar explores how media technologies have shaped Latin American societies and politics from the colonial encounter to the dawn of the digital age. Investigating the local histories of indigenous forms such as the Andean knotted quipu and scribal texts, along with newspapers, radio, photography and social media, we examine how Latin Americans made and used these technologies to assert power, claim status, and launch protests. Through brief theoretical readings and historical case studies, we explore such themes as the relationship between colonialism and the written word, the enduring legacy of alternative indigenous literacies, the importance of rumor and oral communication in societies with low literacy rates, and the role of mass media in identity formation and contemporary social movements.
Structured in part as a lab, the class will be organized around producing a physical and digital exhibition of Latin American media materials available in Wesleyan's collections, to be displayed for the broader university community and beyond. We will produce this exhibition over the course of the semester, integrating individual research projects into our broader collective project that will be conducted as a collaborative/team effort. Along the way we will experiment with hands-on activities that might include making quill pens, setting type, and operating a printing press, take field trips to examine rare media materials first hand, and learn from on-campus experts as we develop our public exhibition. |
Credit: 1 |
Gen Ed Area Dept:
SBS HIST |
Course Format: Seminar | Grading Mode: Graded |
Level: UGRD |
Prerequisites: None |
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Fulfills a Requirement for: (HIST-MN)(HIST)(LAST) |
Major Readings:
Elizabeth Hill Boone & Walter Mignolo, eds. WRITING WITHOUT WORDS: ALTERNATIVE LITERACIES IN MESOAMERICA & THE ANDES Alejandra Bronfman and Andrew Grant Wood, eds. MEDIA, SOUND & CULTURE IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Robert Buffington, A SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION FOR THE WORKING MAN: THE MEXICO CITY PENNY PRESS, 1900-1910 Angel Rama, THE LETTERED CITY Araceli Tinajero, EL LECTOR: A HISTORY OF THE CIGAR FACTORY READER Kirsten Weld, PAPER CADAVERS: THE ARCHIVES OF DICTATORSHIP IN GUATEMALA
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Examinations and Assignments: Semester-long research project, short blog posts, leading one session of class discussion, presentation of research project at on-campus conference. |
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