The School of Communication & Information and the Department of Women's and Gender Studies (School of Arts and Sciences) have teamed up to offer an innovative cross-disciplinary minor in Gender and Media. You'll analyze gendered power inequalities in the media as you acquire hands-on, technical media skills. With exciting capstone and internship opportunities, you’ll gain a rich, unique perspective on gender and the media as well as opportunities to critique, contribute to, and improve current media conditions.

The Gender and Media minor will help prepare you for careers in a number of relevant fields: journalism, media studies, film-making, advertising and marketing, public relations, business and management, social services, public policy, the arts, and many others.

For more information, please visit the SAS Student Page and explore the options below.

Program Information

  

Complementing any major, the Gender and Media minor is a cross-unit, interdisciplinary undergraduate minor offered jointly by SC&I and the School of Arts and Sciences (SAS). The Department of Women’s and Gender Studies is the sole SAS contributor to courses included in the minor. At SC&I, the Department of Journalism and Media Studies is the primary contributor to the minor, offering the majority of course options. Two additional SC&I undergraduate courses, one in the Information Technology and Informatics (ITI) major curriculum and the second in the Digital Communication, Information, and Media (DCIM) minor curriculum are course options for the Gender and Media minor.

You will be introduced to the minor through a foundational course that offers a shared vocabulary for analyzing issues of power and representation within the media. You will then have the choice of taking two electives in media production, as well as two electives in critical media/feminist theory. Finally, you can apply your skills and knowledge of gender and the media in the completion of a project in a capstone course that offers internship, service learning and multi-media project options.

Program-Level Learning Goals

The Gender and Media minor provides a course of study designed for students interested in a combination of theory and practice perspectives on the representation and production of gender in the media.

Minor requirements

The Gender and Media Minor is 18 credits, including:

In the Gender and Media minor, you will take courses from both the School of Communication and Information (SC&I; school number 04) and the School of Arts and Sciences (SAS; school number 01). The minor includes relevant course offerings from the SC&I programs in Journalism and Media Studies (04:567), Information Technology and Informatics (04:547), and Digital Communication, Information and Media (04:189), and from the SAS program in Women's and Gender Studies (01:988).

Students are required to complete six 3-credit courses (with a grade of C or better) in the minor, for a total of 18 credits.

Please note that courses taken for the Gender and Media minor cannot count for credit towards other majors or minors in WGS or SC&I programs.
 

1 Foundational Course (3 credits)

01:988:202 Gender, Culture, and Representation
04:567:215 Gender, Race, and Class in the Media
STUDENTS MAY DECLARE THE MINOR UPON COMPLETION OF 01:988:202 OR 04:567:215

2 Practice/Production Courses (6 credits)
First Practice/Production Course 
One of the following:
04:189:251 Strategic Presentation Methods in Digital Media
04:567:200 Writing for Media
   
Second Practice/Production Course
01:988:200 Gender, Digital Media, and Social Curation
  (Pre-req: 01:988:202 or 04:567:215)

2 Conceptual/Theoretical Courses* (6 credits)
First Conceputal Course
One of the following:
04:567:274 Consumer Media Culture
04:567:380 Media and Social Change
04:547:340 Gender and Technology
  Relevant Special Topics Course
Second Conceptual Course
One of the following:
01:988:255 Gender, Art, & Society
01:988:257 Gender & the Body: Representations of Pornography
01:988:258 Gender, Race, & Contemporary Art
01:988:259 Homosexuality & Visual Culture
01:988:317 Gender and Consumption
01:988:341 Gender and Popular Culture
01:988:376 Theories of Women and Film
01:988:396        Topics in Women's and Gender Studies

*Only 3 of 6 credits may be taken at the 200-level


Capstone (3 credits)
01:988:499 OR 04:567:499 Capstone in Gender and Media
(Pre-req: Minimum of 12 credits in this Minor must be completed.)

Declaring the Minor

Eligibility for the Minor

All majors are eligible for the Gender and Media minor. We encourage you to make an advising appointment to arrange a plan for completing the full program on schedule.

Declaring the Minor

You can declare the minor after you complete one of the two foundation courses with a grade of C or better:

Contact your academic advisor to confirm specific requirements for your academic program.

Certifying the Gender and Media Minor

To be certified as having completed the Gender and Media minor, all Gender and Media courses must be completed with a grade of C or better. Courses with grades below C will not be counted toward the minor. Gender and Media courses cannot be double-counted for the minor and any other major or minor at SC&I or the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies (SAS).

Using Gender and Media Minor Courses Toward Other Requirements

Gender and Media classes fulfill a variety of Core Curriculum requirements for SAS and other schools. Check Degree Navigator to see details.

 Courses Offered in Women's and Gender Studies

01:988:200 Gender, Digital Media and Social Curation (3)
Brings together analytic frameworks in feminist theory and gender studies with emerging bodies of theory about digital media, socialmedia, and digital humanities. (Pre-req: 01:988:202 or 04:567:215).

01:988:202 Gender, Culture, and Representation (3)
Examines how gender is represented in cultural texts and artifacts; introduces students to theories of representation.

01:988:255 Gender, Art, and Society (3)
Women artists, their achievements, and impact. Social and cultural reasons for their neglect in the visual arts and how that neglect is being remedied today. Different ways in which men and women are depicted in art and how those differences relate to culture and society.Please note that this is an online course.

01:988:257 Gender and the Body: Representation and Pornography (3)
Examination of representations of gendered bodies in art, sexuality, gender, politics, and pornography. Examines how to understand who defines what is obscene and why some work is called pornography.

01:988:258 Gender, Race, and Contemporary Art (3)
Intersection of gender and race in contemporary American art. Black and white racial politics in relation to gender and contemporary art in the United States. Special focus on African-American artists.

01:988:259 Homosexuality and Visual Culture (3)
Central role of homosexuality and homoeroticism in visual culture in the distant and recent past as well as the present. Marginalization of homosexual artists, critics, and patrons despite direct participation in cultural production of art and popular culture.

01:988:317 Gender and Consumption (3)
Introduces feminist approaches to consumption through readings that examine the relation of consumption to body, race, nation, and sex work. Prerequisite: 01:988:101 or 201 or 235 or permission of instructor.

01:988:385 Theories of Women and Film (3)
Basic concepts in feminist film theory; the female voice in cinema; representations of women in classical Hollywood film; films made by women.
 
01:988:396 Topics in WGS: Gender, Race, and Technoscience (3)
Selected topics in women's and gender studies. Topics vary each semester. Consult department.
 
01:988:499 Capstone in Gender and Media (3)
In-depth, project-based exploration of issues in gender and media.

Courses Offered in the School of Communication and Information

 
04:567:215 Gender, Race, and Class in the Media (3)
Content, treatment, and effects of women and minority group coverage in television, newspapers, magazines, popular music and film.
 
04:189:251 Strategic Presentation Methods in Digital Media (3)
Examines theories and techniques for analyzing, producing, and disseminating messages. Students will learn how to use web-based and multimedia presentation tools to connect with a variety of audiences and convey a desired message. Each student will craft a message to support some social change by developing and shaping the message into compelling digital media presentations in a range of formats.
 
04:547:340 Gender and Technology (3)
Analyzes gender in relation to race, class, nationality, culture, religion, and sexuality in the context of technological innovation. Its focus is on fundamental concepts, the feminist critique of technoscience, and the impact of gender issues on workplace inclusiveness and equity, in a transnational and historical perspective. It examines the effects of gender on the development and use of information technologies and on gender-based electronic information preferences.
 
04:567:274 Consumer Media Culture (3)
Provides a critical understanding of advertising's role in society. Examines the history of advertising, the commercial and social aspects of the messages conveyed by ads, and the advertising industry's influence on social relations and institutions, such as journalism. The basic orientation of the course is to study consumer media culture (advertising, public relations, and branded space) as a form unique to modern society.
 
04:567:324 Digital News Reporting and Writing (3)
Fundamentals of gathering information and journalistic writing. By the end of the course, students will be able to teach basic journalistic newswriting and reporting techniques, including writing in journalistic style, fact-gathering, observation, freedom of information and ethics.
 
04:567:380 Media and Social Change (3)
Looks at how past and present social movements (e.g., environmental, civil rights, labor movements) challenge dominant social, economic, and political structures and how they have been portrayed in the mass media. It also examines how social activists use media technologies to organize themselves and communicate their messages to wide audiences in order to achieve social change.
 
01:567:499 Capstone in Gender and Media (3)
In-depth, project-based exploration of issues in gender and media.