Social Media Research Autumn 2016 Wednesday 11:30 AM AVC Lecturer: Tae-Sik Kim Office Hour: Tue 1:00 – 2:00 PM & Wed 1:30 – 3:00 PM Contact Information: beinkid@mail.muni.cz Office. 5. 45 Ø Course Objectives This course examines the sociocultural impacts of social media, the most advanced form of human communicative technology. Grounded in the understanding of the relationship between technology and society, this course looks closely at technological features of social media as well as the cultural consequences of mediated interactions among people. The course then turns to particular issues in relation to the uses of social media. By reading a variety of research articles assigned in the course and participating in class discussions, students learn to develop their own research projects focusing on social media and its sociocultural impacts. § Comprehend the relationship between technology and society. § Understand various social impacts of social media. § Review and analyze a variety of research articles on social media. § Find important themes and methods of social media research § Lead insightful discussions. § Develop a research project by applying sociocultural experiences. Ø Syllabus Week 1. Course introduction Week 2. National Holiday Week 3. Technology and culture Week 4. What is Social Media? Week 5. Social media and Politics Week 6. Social Media Marketing (No Class) Week 7. Social Media and Social Changes Week 8. Final Research Consultation (No Class. Personal Consultation) Week 9. Social media and Intercultural Communication Week 10. Social Media for the Old and the Young Week 11. Social Media and Visual Communication Week 12. “Critical” Social Media Studies Week 13. Class Conference. Ø Literatures Reading Articles: See, below. Ø Teaching Methods The format of the course is a combination of brief lectures and controlled discussions of various assigned readings. All students are expected to read all articles assigned and to develop appropriate discussion questions. Each student is a discussion leader for an assigned week. Students submit a research paper (topic of student’s choice in consultation with instructor; minimum 20 pages including references, figures, and tables). Ø Assessment Methods · Attendance: 4 unexcused absences during a semester shall be denied academic credit · Response Papers (80 x 5 = 400) ü Summarize Required Articles and Develop 2 discussion questions. ü Submit only 5 response papers (Not every week. Choose 5 seminars out of a total of 9) ü Submit by noon the day before each class ü No response papers in Week 1, 2, 8 and 13 ü !!! No Late Paper Accepted · One Discussion Leader (100) · Final Presentation (100): Week 13 · Research Paper (400): Due- Midnight, Monday 9. January. 2017 (Late Paper – Subtract 5% for each day after the due date) Total: 1000 A: 900-1000 B: 800-899 C: 700-799 D: 600-699 E: 500-599 F: -499 Ø Study Materials All materials, with the exception of book chapters available in the library and articles available online, will be provided in PDF format. Week 3. Technology and culture · McLuhan, M. “Understanding Media” Introduction, Chapter 1, and 2 · Mumford, L. “Technics and Civilization” Introduction and Chapter 1 · Castells, M. (2000). Toward a sociology of the network society. Contemporary Sociology, 29 (5), 693-699. Week 4. What is Social Media · Donath, J. “Sociable Media” · boyd, d. m., & Ellison, N. B. (2007). Social network sites: Definition, history, and scholarship. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 13(1), · Burkell, Fortier, Yeung, Wong, Simpson (2014): Facebook: public space, or private space?, Information, Communication & Society Week 5. Social media & Politics · Bulut, E. (2016). Social media and the nation state: of revolution and collaboration. Media, Culture & Society, 38(4), 606-618. · Wattal, S., Schuff, D., Mandviwalla, M., & Williams, C. B. (2010). Web 2.0 and politics: the 2008 US presidential election and an e-politics research agenda.Mis Quarterly, 34(4), 669-688. · Housholder, E. E., & LaMarre, H. L. (2014). Facebook politics: Toward a process model for achieving political source credibility through social media.Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 11(4), 368-382. Week 6. Social Media Marketing · Wang, C., & Zhang, P. (2012). The evolution of social commerce: The people, management, technology, and information dimensions. Communications of the Association for Information Systems, 31(5), 1-23. · Chu, S. C. (2011). Viral advertising in social media: Participation in Facebook groups and responses among college-aged users. Journal of Interactive Advertising, 12(1), 30-43. · Lim, Y., Chung, Y., & Weaver, P. A. (2012). The impact of social media on destination branding Consumer-generated videos versus destination marketer-generated videos. Journal of Vacation Marketing, 18(3), 197-206. Week 7. Social Media and Social Changes (Choose 3 articles to read) · Shirky, C. (2011). The political power of social media: Technology, the public sphere, and political change. Foreign Affairs. · Lim, M. (2012). Clicks, cabs, and coffee houses: Social media and oppositional movements in Egypt, 2004–2011. Journal of Communication, 62(2), 231-248. · DeLuca, K. M., Lawson, S., & Sun, Y. (2012). Occupy Wall Street on the public screens of social media: The many framings of the birth of a protest movement. Communication, Culture & Critique, 5(4), 483-509. · Poell, T. (2014). Social media and the transformation of activist communication: exploring the social media ecology of the 2010 Toronto G20 protests. Information, Communication & Society, 17(6), 716-731. Week 9. Social Media and Intercultural Communication · Pfister, D. S., & Soliz, J. (2011). (Re)Conceptualizing Intercultural Communication in a Networked Society. Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, 4, 246–251 · Kim, Tae-Sik (2016). Transnational communication practices by unaccompanied Korean young students in the United States, Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 25(2). 148-167. · Fogg, B. J. & Izawa, D. (2008). Online Persuasion in Facebook and Mixi: A Cross-Cultural Comparison, Persuasive, 35-46. Week 10. Social Media for the Old and the Young (Choose 3 articles to read) · Subrahmanyam, K. & Greenfield, P. (2008). Online communication and adolescent relationships. The Future of Children, 18 (1), 119-146 · boyd, danah. (2007) “Why Youth (Heart) Social Network Sites: The Role of Networked Publics in Teenage Social Life.” MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Learning – Youth, Identity, and Digital Media Volume (ed. David Buckingham). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. · Gibson, L., Moncur, W., Forbes, P., Arnott, J., Martin, C., & Bhachu, A. S. (2010, September). Designing social networking sites for older adults. In Proceedings of the 24th BCS Interaction Specialist Group Conference (pp. 186-194). British Computer Society. · Harley, D., & Fitzpatrick, G. (2012). Appropriation of social networking by older people: two case studies. Week 11. Social Media and Visual Communication · Borges-Rey, E. (2015). News Images on Instagram: The paradox of authenticity in hyperreal photo reportage. Digital Journalism, 3(4), 571-593 · Kim, T-S. (2015) Defining the Occupy Movement: Visual Analysis of Facebook Profile Images Posted by Local Occupy Movement Group, Visual Communication Quarterly, 22(3), 174-186 · Murray, D. C. (2015). Notes to self: the visual culture of selfies in the age of social media. Consumption Markets & Culture, 18(6), 490-516. Week 12. “Critical” Social Media Studies · Fuchs, C. (2014). Social media: A critical introduction. Sage. Chapter 5, 7, 8, 11