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MEDIA (LITERACY) EDUCATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Prepared by Rose Pacatte, fsp
Director, Pauline Center for Media Studies
50 Saint Pauls Avenue
Boston, MA 02130-3491
Mediastudies@pauline.org
(available from Pauline
Book & Media stores;
visit our CULTURE & COMMUNICATIONS section)
The following books form a basic resource library for
educators, parents and pastoral ministers wishing to gain a background
in media education and to teach media awareness in the classroom or in
group settings, at home, school or the faith community.
Babin, Pierre (1991) New Era in Religious Communication, Fortress:
Minneapolis, ISBN 0800624378
This insightful volume explores the deeper religious meaning of the revolution
in global communication. Responding to these momentous shifts, Pierre
Babin articulates a new Christian approach to communication. He relates
media to new ecclesial forms, new youth cultures, the contemporary quest
for religious experience, new theological emphases and especially new
and relevant forms of religious education. This book is "a stimulating,
relevant and substantive treatment of catechetics, evangelization and
communication theory" (from the back cover".
Baugh, Lloyd (1997) Imaging the Divine: Jesus
Christ and Christ Figures in Film, Sheed and Ward: Kansas City ISBN 1556128630
Covering the history of Jesus films as a genre from the early
years to its transition to the representation of Christ-figure in the
movies, this is a "thorough, steady, expert and fascinating book
Imaging the Divine should be on the agenda of theology professors and
students, on the table of Christian filmmakers, reviewers and educators,
indeed, all those who have a public function in the Church" (from
the cover). This volume is part of Sheed & Ward's excellent Communication,
Culture and Theology Series.
Duncan, Barry, et al., (1996) Mass Media and Popular
Culture, Version 2, Student Text and Resource Manual for Teachers, Harcourt,
Brace & Company, Canada
The mass media play a critical role in determining political
agendas, constructing social realities, establishing news, and dictating
how we use our leisure time. The signs and symbols of our popular culture
pervade every aspect of our lives, including the way in which young people
process classroom learning. Mass Media and Popular Culture, Version 2,
is a response to the need of educators to help young people cope with
our evolving information and entertainment society.
(Please order these titles from the Pauline Book &
Media store, Toronto)
Eilers, F.J. (1997) Church and Social Communications:
Basic Documents, 2nd Edition Logos:Manila ISBN 9715100724
This is a unique collection of all Church documents of the 20th
century dealing with the social communication. Includes:
--major encyclicals and documents with historical introductions
--outlines to each document
--Pontifical Messages for World Communications Day 1967-1997
--Selections from other major ecclesial documents on communication and
media
--Complete index
--List of Selected International Literature
This book is a must for all persons interested in discovering the development
of Church teaching on the theology, spirituality, ethics and morality
of social communication today.
Hailer, Gretchen (1997) Believing in a Media Culture,
St. Mary's Press/Winona ISBN 0884893901
Part of The Horizons Series for high school students,
this minicourse is about the media: television, movies, music, magazine
and computer technologies and recognizes their pervasiveness and increasing
influence among all age groups in our culture. Young people in particular
need to learn to interact with these media in healthful ways. And Christian
parents and educators are rightly concerned that such "media literacy"
be grounded in human and Gospel values. This three session course (2 hours
each) helps young people to critically assess the mixed messages of the
Gospel through the lens of Christian faith. The participants will develop
skills that will last a lifetime.
Hereford, M.J., Thomas, Corrine (1997) New Babel,
New Pentecost:
Communicating the Gospel in a Mass Mediated Culture, Pauline
Books
& Media: Boston ISBN 0819851345
Directed toward parents and pastoral ministers, this book
features
--background information on culture and communication
--workshop suggestions
--reproducible handouts and a wealth of additional resources to bridge
the gap between the theoretical knowledge of media culture and an effective
and practical response to it.
Masterman, Len (1985) Teaching the Media, Routledge:
New York ISBN 0415108608
This pivotal work is the "bible" of the media
literacy education movement. It is a comprehensive study of media education
and is an indispensable to all teachers and students seeking to understand
and master the theory and practice of media education. An essential text
and highly recommended.
May, John, Editor (1997) New Image in Religious
Film Sheed and Ward: Kansas City ISBN 1556127618
This collection brings together contributors from richly
diverse backgrounds - literature, art, history, mass communication, sociology,
anthropology, philosophy, theology -- to explore a wide range of current
issues concerning the interrelationship of religion and film, including
approaches to the question of what constitutes cinema's religious dimension
.
Addresses the continued discomfort with, even distrust of, films by theologians
and suggests ways in which film, far from subverting the theological venture,
can be a worthy ally not only in the process of evangelization, but also
in faith's search for understanding. (Also part of Sheed & Ward's
Communication, Culture and Theology Series).
Price, Stuart (1993) Media Studies Longman: London
ISBN 0273600834
Beginning with models of human interaction, this first college-level
textbook examines a range of mass media forms and practices. Advertising,
television, film, photojournalism, the music industry, newspapers and
comics are all used to explore the usefulness of theory, from semiology,
content analysis and psychological approaches, to more recent ideas about
discourse and address.
Media Studies:
--encourages research and analytical skills
--combines theory with practical exercises
--provides essay titles on a range of forms and concept
--gives examples of transcripts and student coursework
--is illustrated with original diagrams and photographs, and reproduces
a number of examples of leaflets, advertisements, headlines and cartoons.
Although written for a British audience, this text has
been used successfully in North America since its publication.
Sunderaj, Victor, et al., (1998) Pastoral Planning
for Social Communication,
Paulines:Montreal
This recent book on Pastoral Planning for Social Communication offers
articles from different parts of the world to help individuals, Church
groups, dioceses and religious institutions to formulate their own pastoral
plan for social communication.
In the foreword to the book, Archbishop John P. Foley,
President of the Pontifical Council for Social Communication, writes,
"one might say that the first pastoral plan in communication was
Creation, the second was Revelation, the third was Incarnation, but the
fourth pastoral plan involves evangelization: how to communicate the significance
of Creation, the richness of Revelation and the tremendous reality of
the Incarnation
"
Rossi, Philip J. & Soukup, Paul A. (1994)
Mass Media and the Moral Imagination Sheed & Ward: Kansas City ISBN
1556126220
This much we know: the world which informs our moral thinking
is one in which the mass media dominate other voices.
The essays in this collection offer a critical examination
of this mass mediated world. Written from the perspectives of a variety
of disciplines-communication, education, psychology, philosophy, theology
- they explore the impact that modern communications technology and mass
media have upon the stage of our human moral world.
While acknowledging that modern communication and mass
communication have their own inner dynamic, the essays stress an important
principle for educators, parents and all citizens of this "global"
village: mass media, which are human products subject to human responsibility,
can be directed to serve rather than to overwhelm the conditions for discerning
the genuine human good and promoting moral progress.
Trampiets, F. (1998) Faith in the Media?, Ave
Maria Press:Notre Dame
ISBN 0877936129 (text and teacher's guide)
This is a pertinent elective mini-course in the area of
media awareness and literacy. In eight complete sessions, teens will examine
these and other issues:
--how media attempts to portray culture
--how the business of advertising finances the media and how advertising
finances the media and how advertisements --compare to the Christian message
--the built-in biases that accompany news reporting and how religious
topics are reported in the medin the influence of --media violence and
strategies for peaceful conflict resolution
--how contemporary music can be enjoyable but at times conflicting with
the Christian message
--how to negotiate the meaning of the many sexual images viewers are exposed
to in the media in the light of our Christian faith
--the potential of spreading the good news via the Internet
--how to develop a personal plan for being a better media consumer
(These reviews are either quoted from or closely based
on back cover or catalogue descriptions)
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