Special Topics (390-0-20)
Topic
Visual (Re)Presentation: Image, Culture, and Meani
Instructors
Dr. Rafael O. Matos
Meeting Info
Fisk Hall 311: Tues 2:00PM - 4:50PM
Overview of class
This course explores how images - from digital media posts to paintings and political ads - communicate, persuade, and shape public understanding and collective meaning. The course bridges interpretive analysis and strategic communication by asking: What do images do, whom do they serve, and what values do they reinforce or challenge?
Students will use critical and cultural frameworks to analyze the relationship between visuals and text across journalism, advertising, and social platforms, unpacking how design, context, and technology influence interpretation. Through visual essays and cross-platform analysis, students will develop critical visual literacy for a media landscape driven by images and explore how power, bias, identity, and ethics influence the way images communicate across contexts.
To note: This course does not count toward the IMC Certificate.
Learning Objectives
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, students will be able to:
1. Analyze how visual images communicate, persuade, and shape public understanding across media contexts.
2. Apply critical, cultural, and ethical frameworks to interpret how visuals construct and circulate meaning.
3. Evaluate how design, context, and technology influence the perception and impact of visual communication across platforms.
4. Critique the role of power, bias, and identity in shaping how images represent people, issues, and ideas.
5. Create visual essays and analyses that connect interpretive critique with strategic communication practice.
Class Materials (Required)
none
Class Attributes
Attendance at 1st class mandatory