Great Power Point Presentations Dont be boring Dont
Great Power. Point Presentations Don’t be boring Don’t read—ever! Pictures on EVERY slide If a slide gets crowded, make two slides Large, legible fonts Bullets – not sentences Pictures on EVERY slide Maximum 15 words per slide
Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian Newspapers Mark Cronlund Anderson and Carmen L. Robertson Winnipeg, Manitoba: University of Manitoba Press, 2011 (362 pp. )
Carmen L. Robertson Fine Arts professor, U of R Mark Cronlund Anderson History Professor, Luther Decolonizing Media panel in November 2015—Carmen in the middle Photo credit Eagleclaw Thom
The objective of the Canadian Journal of Communication is • to publish Canadian research and scholarship in the field of communication studies . • particular attention is paid to research that has a distinctive Canadian flavour by virtue of choice of topic or by drawing on the legacy of Canadian theory and research.
Reviewer: Matthew Tegelberg • Assistant Professor, Department of Social Science, York University • Ph. D. in Cultural Studies, Trent University • Master's Degree from Program in Communication and Culture, York and Ryerson • Tegelberg researches and teaches global tourism, environmental communication, and media representations of indigenous peoples.
Theoretical Framework Antonio Gramsci’s “hegemonic assimilation” Gramsci says this is how “an imperial power attempts to impose its cultural world views upon the Other” (p. 5). Seeing Red looks at colonial ideology (treaty system and residential schools) also manifested itself within news coverage of Aboriginals in Canada since 1869.
Media and Public Opinion • Canada’s printed press has always played an influential role in shaping public opinions and attitudes toward Aboriginal peoples. • Seeing Red says that three overlapping “essentialisms” have dominated Canadian newspaper framings of Aboriginal peoples: q moral depravity, q racial inferiority, q inability to progress (p. 7).
- Slides: 8