MA Anthropology of Media (not running 2018/19)
Master
In City of London
Description
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Type
Master
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Location
City of london
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Start date
Different dates available
Start of programme: September intake only
Mode of Attendance: Full-time or Part-time
Who is this programme for?: A wide range of students with different interests and backgrounds come to this programme from world over in order to explore why media matter. They are highly qualified with very diverse international interests. It is particularly suitable for:
Students with a degree in media or cultural studies
Students with a degree in the social sciences or humanities wishing to acquire a broad understanding of media and cultural studies with special reference to Asia or Africa
People with professional experience in film, television, journalism, advertising or public relations
Students with a degree in social anthropology wishing to pursue more specialist media-related topics along with regional or language-based study
Students without a previous degree in Anthropology looking for an MA conversion degree to serve as a qualification for pursuing a further research degree in anthropology
Please note this programme is not running in 2018/19.
Our world is inescapably and continuously transformed through a proliferation of media. The MA in Anthropology of Media at SOAS takes up the challenge of understanding how and why media matter. The programme uniquely combines anthropology, media and cultural studies with specific regional expertise in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. It provides students with critical skills, research methods, a wide-ranging understanding of media and the opportunity to pursue original research projects. The MA in Anthropology and Media is the first and still the only programme in Europe that specialises in bringing together contemporary anthropological concerns with media and cultural studies..
The MA in Anthropology of Media is a recent and rapidly growing field within the larger academic discipline of Anthropology regional studies centre within the School.
SOAS also offers strong interdisciplinary support for the study of media including the...
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The average rating is higher than 3.7
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This centre has featured on Emagister for 7 years
Subjects
- Media
- International
- Cinema
- Cultural Studies
- Social Anthropology
- Sociology
- Options
Course programme
Learn a language as part of this programme
Degree programmes at SOAS - including this one - can include language courses in more than forty African and Asian languages. It is SOAS students’ command of an African or Asian language which sets SOAS apart from other universities.
Programme OverviewThe programme consists of 180 credits in total: 120 credits of modules and a dissertation of 10,000 words at 60 credits.
All students are expected to take the core and compulsory modules listed below, except for students with a previous Anthropology degree, who are not required to take the Theoretical Approaches to Social Anthropology module but may wish to select this as part of their 120 credits from the options lists.
All students must audit the compulsory module, Ethnographic Research Methods during term 1. This will not count towards the 180 credits. Students will be expected to attend only lectures and do not attend seminars or submit any assessments. Students may choose to take this module (worth 15 credits) as part of their 120 credits from the option lists.
Students with a previous Anthropology degree will be required to take 30 credits from the Anthropology and Sociology options list.
The remaining credits can be selected from the Department of Anthropology and Sociology or relevant options from other departments or a language module. See below for a detailed programme structure.
Language Entitlement Programme:
Many students choose to pursue a language through the SOAS Language Entitlement Programme (LEP). Languages normally available include Arabic, Chinese, French, Hebrew, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, Turkish and Urdu. Others may also be offered.
Programme DetailCOMPULSORY MODULESStudents without a previous Anthropology degree are required to take all the compulsory modules, totalled at 90 credits. Students with a previous Anthropology degree are not required to take the Theoretical Approaches to Social Anthropology module, totalled at 60 credits. All students are required to audit the Ethnographic Research Methods module. This will not count towards your 180 credits.
- Dissertation in Anthropology and Sociology
- Ethnographic Research Methods
- Theoretical Approaches to Social Anthropology
All students must take the core module worth 30 credits.
- Comparative Media Studies
Students with a previous Anthropology degree: 30 credits of your programme must be selected from the Anthropology and Sociology list. All students can select the remaining 60 credits from Anthropology and Sociology or other departments a language module.
Anthropology and Sociology- African and Asian Cultures in Britain
- African and Asian Diasporas in the Modern World
- Anthropological approaches to agriculture, food and nutrition
- Anthropology of Human Rights (PG)
- Anthropology of Globalisation (PG)
- Anthropology of Law
- Culture and Society of China
- Culture and Society of East Africa
- Culture and Society of Japan
- Culture and Society of South Asia
- Culture and Society of South East Asia
- Culture and Society of Near and Middle East
- Culture and Society of West Africa
- Ethnographic Research Methods
- Issues in Mind, Culture and Psychiatry
- Issues in Anthropology and Film
- Issues in the Anthropology of Gender
- Media Production Skills
- Religions on the move: New Currents and Emerging Trends in Global Religion
- Theoretical Approaches to Social Anthropology
- Therapy and Culture
- Tourism and Travel: A Global Perspective
- Aspects of African film and video 2
- Digital traditional broadcasting communication
- International Political Communication
- Mediated Culture in the Middle East: Politics and Communications
- Sound Recording and Production
- Theoretical Approaches to International Journalisms
- Transnational Communities and Diasporic Media:Networking, Connectivity, Identity
- Modern Chinese Film and Theatre (MA)
- Modern Film from Taiwan and the Chinese Diaspora
- Gender and Development
- Asia and Africa On Display: Objects, Exhibitions and Transculturism
- Diaspora Contexts and Visual Culture
- Japanese Post-War Film Genres and the Avant-Garde
- Japanese Transnational Cinema: From Kurosawa to Asia Extreme and Studio Ghibli
- Japanese Television since 1953
- Film and Society in the Middle East
- Indian Cinema: Its History and Social Context
- Indian Cinema: Key Issues
- Genders and Sexualities in South East Asian Film
- Post-crisis Thai Cinema (1997-2007)
- (Post) Colonialism and Otherness in South East Asia on Screen
For a list of language modules, please go to the Faculty of Languages and Cultures webpages - - and view the options under the postgraduate modules section for each department.
This is the structure for 2018/19 applicants
If you are a current student you can find structure information on Moodle or through your Department.
Programme Specification- Programme Specification (pdf; 142kb)
Important notice regarding changes to programmes and modules
MA Anthropology of Media (not running 2018/19)