Media Ethics

A.Y. 2023/2024
6
Max ECTS
40
Overall hours
SSD
M-FIL/03
Language
English
Learning objectives
The principal purpose of this course is to introduce the students to the contemporary public debate on the ethical and political implications in the use of traditional and new media. Media ethics has in fact become a new area of applied ethics and has acquired a central role in philosophy, especially with the increase in number of platforms, their means, and the variety of arenas in which public discourse confronts new social problems. This course intends to offer a critical analysis of the instruments and the dynamics of the various forms of contemporary communication in order to identify possible restrictions, intrinsic values and normative indications. The course aims to illustrate how the target of all media (television, journalism, advertising, social networks, cinematic narrations, political and professional communications) is no longer a simple recipient of a message, as was often in past models of communication. The course will start with the rehabilitation of a normative conception of rhetoric, the one by which it is possible to make good reasons win over the wrong ones. Subsequently, the course will provide a historical reconstruction of the development of media, and this will be proposed in order to provide the students with the knowledge necessary to understand the evolution of these means of communication as a premise to their critical analysis. Each media will have its module, in which both theoretical explanations and practical examples will be offered. Finally, a monographic part will be dedicated to the relationship between media and the exercise of political power, starting from the first philosophical reflections on this topic (the School of Frankfurt, Existentialism and Foucault) to the more recent researches on web politics and its new conception of democracy. This course will provide and develop student competences coherently with the intention of training potential political consultants, who will be able to elaborate efficient social campaigns and informed communication strategies.
Expected learning outcomes
At Understand the structural changes of the relationship between politics, society and communication in the new Millennium;
2)Recognize communication strategies in both traditional and new media;
3)Analyse one of the most important political arena of the contemporary world critically - both from a descriptive and a normative perspective;
4)Develop their understanding of media and improve their personal ability for critical judgment of the latter through practical exercises (i.e. proposals of social campaigns, rhetoric analysis of public discourses and different forms of narrations, etc.)
Single course

This course can be attended as a single course.

Course syllabus and organization

Single session

Lesson period
Second trimester
Course syllabus
The principal purpose of this course is to introduce the students to the contemporary public debate on the ethical and political implications in the use of traditional and new media. Media ethics has in fact become a new area of applied ethics and has acquired a central role in philosophy, especially with the increase in number of platforms, their means, and the variety of arenas in which public discourse confronts new social problems. This course intends to offer a critical analysis of the instruments and the dynamics of the various forms of contemporary communication in order to identify possible restrictions, intrinsic values and normative indications.

Institutional part:
· Media ethics: an introduction
· Propaganda: origin and critics
· The main theories of mass communication
· The mass society: a philosophical perspective I
· The mass society: a philosophical perspective II
· From mass society to consumer society
· Media Studies and the post-alphabetic era
Seminar with Alessandro Volpe on Habermas and public opinion

Monographic part: Democracy and capitalism in the digital era
· Democracy and social media
· Storytelling and populism
· Fake News and algorithms
Seminar with Giuseppe De Ruvo on algorithmic governmentality
· Surveillance capitalism I
· Surveillance capitalism II
· Digital Markets
· Rethinking free speech in the digital era I
· Rethinking free speech in the digital era II
· Responsibility and platforms
· Students' presentations I
· Students' presentations II
Prerequisites for admission
There are no special prerequisites.
Teaching methods
Front lessons and discussion.
Teaching Resources
Cass Sunstein, #Republic: Divided Democracy in the Age of Social Media, Princeton University Press 2018.

In addition, choose one text between:
· Timothy Garton Ash, Free Speech: Ten Principles for a Connected World, Yale University Press 2016.
· Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, Public Affairs 2018.
Non-attending students must read both texts.
Assessment methods and Criteria
Oral Exam.
The evaluation will also include a class presentation on a specific subject chosen by the student as an in-depth study of one of the topics covered during the course.
Evaluation criteria:
1. Knowledge of the contents
2. Precision of language
3. Adequacy of exposition
4. Ability to re-elaborate
M-FIL/03 - MORAL PHILOSOPHY - University credits: 6
Lessons: 40 hours
Professor: Russo Maria
Educational website(s)