Welcome

The Communication and Culture major offers students interdisciplinary study of the cultural foundations underlying the vast communication phenomena we experience daily.

Courses probe the crucial but subtle messages embedded in visual and graphic images, everyday discourse, literary works, music, historical writing, material productions, and other symbolic systems. The major encourages students to integrate concepts and ideas with professional practices, and to engage in original projects and research.

The Communication and Culture Program currently enrolls approximately 90 majors and 25 minors. The first class of 25 students graduated in 1998, and student interest continues to grow.

Professor Malsky

 


Letter from the Program Director

Welcome to the web site for the Communication and Culture Program, a unique interdisciplinary major at Clark University.


As a major, you will study the role of communication in culture. You will learn new ways of thinking about communication, and explore topics as diverse as the effects of mass media, the creation of nationalism and nationalist symbols, gender and language development, and new media technologies. As a COMM student, you will develop critical and analytical skills for understanding the role of communication in your own life and in larger society.


Unlike the Communications program at most colleges, our curriculum is not primarily technical or skills-based. Though we offer credit for production classes, our goals are analytical: to understand how communications processes work, whether in an argument between friends or in a political speech. At Clark, you might study how the dress of Asian women in London has become culturally charged and powerfully coded, or how images of "tough girls" are used in American movies.


Our program studies communication at the intersection of many disciplines – including history, linguistics, urban education, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and the fine arts – drawing from both humanistic and social-scientific modes of inquiry to examine fundamental communication processes and effects. Clark’s global, international character offers many opportunities for our students to think about, and to shape the impact of communication throughout the world.


For more information about the program, please contact me at mmalsky@clarku.edu or Lisa Coakley, program assistant, at 508-793-7180 or through e-mail at lcoakley@clarku.edu.


Thank you for visiting,

Matt Malsky