Hi Torsten
No, my degree is in Communications and Cultural Studies. I have taught and worked in video.
Well my career sort of evolved backwards. I decided to study for an MA because I was already teaching a video class.
But my video experience started in the “olden days” of film production, back in the last century. Celluloid, f-stops and chemicals. None of this new-fangle digit-ology.
I have worked on documentary films all over Ireland, also England and Wales, parts of Europe, North Africa, East Africa, The Philipines and south Pacific.
Well I don’t have a hard and fast one. It is one of those words where the meaning depends on where you’re coming from. My interest was more in Communications and Media: how the media influence our lives, how people react to - and interact with - the the way their world is portrayed; and the economics and politics of media ownership and control. Who decides what to print or broadcast ? and why ?
Living in Ireland from 5th October 1968, through the early '70s and '80s, Bloody Sunday, the hunger strikes, Gibraltar, media censorship, the Peace process: the role of the media in reporting and in influencing events is a fascinating study in itself.
(I suppose many younger, non-Irish, will not know what I am talking about).
And there is the whole issue of the English language: political, economic, cultural.
Why do some many people want to - or need to learn it. Is it such a good idea ?
Maybe we should all study Chinese.
What about Hiberno English . . .
. . . . Ireland’s British problem . . .
. . . . . . . Italia 90 . . .
I could go on and on . . . and on . . .
But that’ll do for now,
Art