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发表于 23-5-2018 11:16 AM
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學會看sukatan, 也就學會了考試內容的範圍。。。。。 老師也是要根據sukatan 教的, 所以他/她沒有教導的地方, 可以自己惡補。
學會看sukatan, 以後在大學也是有一個叫科目內容(module outline), 就是講師會告訴你每個星期要修讀的東西, 自己分析去。 一般國立大學需要獨立自修能力強。。加油。
以後大學你會碰上這樣的東西, 也可以是你的sukatan, 這個是新加坡大學的:
https://ivle.nus.edu.sg/lms/publ ... lickFrom=StuViewBtn
Module Code | SE2210 | Module Title | POPULAR CULTURE IN SOUTHEAST ASIA | Semester | Semester 1, 2017/2018 | Modular Credits | 4 | Faculty | Arts & Social Sciences | Department | Southeast Asian Studies | Timetable | [url=]Timetable/Teaching Staff[/url] | Module Facilitators | DR Mohd Effendy Bin Abdul Hamid | Lecturer |
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Aims & Objectives
Popular culture is an exciting field of study. Through case studies of different popular cultural forms - such as music, dance, film, TV shows, social
media, magazines – in Southeast Asia, this module will raise questions about identity, nationalism, agency, hegemony, resistance, and subjectivities.
Popular culture is always dynamic. The same cultural products carry different meanings depending on time, place and social context. This is especially
relevant in our globalized world of transnational cultural flows. Is it valid to speak of cultural globalization as "Coca-colonization" or "McDonaldization"?
For example, would a Hollywood film mean the same thing to all viewers in the US? And would it carry the same meanings that it did in the US for all
viewers in the Philippines? Popular cultural forms can be vehicles of resistance to (or, at the least, agency in the context of) dominant ideologies.
AIMS: The primary aim of the module is to help students critically analyze popular culture in contemporary Southeast Asia and engage with theoretical
work on the subject.
OBJECTIVES: By the end of the module, students should be able to a) explain the roots and place of popular culture in everyday life in contemporary
Southeast Asia; and b) formulate their own critical reading of the complexities of popular culture. |
Week 1 (17 August) (NO LECTURE)
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Week 2 (24 August, THURSDAY) Introduction/s and Definitions-: A History of Popular Culture in Southeast Asia, theories of Popular Culture
Readings:
Nissim Otmazgin, “Does Popular Culture Matter to the Southeast Asian region?” (Download from IVLE workbin)
Raymond Williams, “On High and Popular Culture,” The New Republic, November 22, 1974: https://newrepublic.com/article/79269/high-and-popular-culture
John Storey, “What is popular culture,” in Storey, Cultural Theory and Popular Culture (Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2001), 1-16: http://www.tezu.ernet.in/dmass/S ... PULAR%20CULTURE.pdf
Theodore Adorno and Max Horkheimer, “The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception,” in The Dialectic of Enlightenment (1944): https://web.stanford.edu/dept/DLCL/files/pdf/adorno_culture_industry.pdf
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SE2210 tutorials
1st tutorial: 28th August (Monday)
Tutorial reading: Nissim Otmazgin, “Does Popular Culture Matter to the Southeast Asian region?" (Download from IVLE workbin)
D1 Mon 10:00am - 12:00pm at AS1-03-03
D2 Mon 12:00pm - 2:00pm at AS1-02-05
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Week 3 Meanings and Interpretations (31 August, Thursday)
Reading: Clifford Geertz, “Deep Play: Notes on the Balinese Cockfight,” Daedalus, 101 (1), Myth, Symbol, and Culture, Winter, 1972: 1-37 (JSTOR)
Ward Keeler, “What's Burmese about Burmese Rap? Why Some Expressive Forms Go Global,” American Ethnologist, 36 (1), February 2009: 2-19 (LINC)
Vu Hong Thuat, “Amulets and the Marketplace,” Asian Ethnology, 67 (2) Popular Religion and the Sacred Life of Material Goods in Contemporary Vietnam, 2008: 237-255 (JSTOR)
Deborah Wong and Mai Elliot. “I Want the Microphone: Mass-Mediation and Agency in Asian American Popular Music,” The Drama Review, 38 (3), Fall 1994): 152-167 (JSTOR)
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Week 4 Meanings and Interpretations (7 September, Thursday)
Readings:
Brenda Chan and Wang Xueli, “Of prince charming and male chauvinist pigs: Singaporean female viewers and the dream-world of Korean television dramas,” International Journal of Cultural Studies, 14 (3), 2011: 291-305 (LINC)
Stuart Hall, “Encoding, Decoding,” in Simon During ed, The Cultural Studies Reader (Routledge, 1993), (Download from IVLE workbin)
Optional readings
Amporn Jirratikorn, “Pirated Transnational Broadcasting: The Consumption of Thai Soap Operas among Shan Communities in Burma,” Sojourn. 23, 1 (2008): 30-62 (JSTOR)
Noboru Toyoshima, “Longing for Japan: The Consumption of Japanese Cultural Products in Thailand,” SOJOURN, 23 (2), 2008: 252-282 (JSTOR)
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2nd tutorial: 11 Sept (Monday)
Tutorial reading: Stuart Hall, “Encoding, Decoding,” in Simon During ed, The Cultural Studies Reader (Routledge, 1993), (Download from IVLE workbin)
Class D1 Mon 10:00am - 12:00pm at AS1-03-03
Class D2 Mon 12:00pm - 2:00pm at AS1-02-05 |
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