Centre for Global Media and Communications

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Start date
Duration
1 year
Attendance mode
Full-time or part-time
Location
On Campus
Fees

Home: £12,710
International: £26,330

Course code
P3S2
Entry requirements

We will consider all applications with a 2:2 (or international equivalent) or higher in a social science or humanities subject. In addition to degree classification we take into account other elements of the application such as supporting statement. References are optional, but can help build a stronger application if you fall below the 2:2 requirement or have non-traditional qualifications.

See international entry requirements and English language requirements.

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Drawing on the grounded expertise of staff, it offers a specialised study of the global media environment in relation to Asian, African and Middle Eastern societies and cultures, together with rigorous training in and questioning of contemporary media and communication theory.

We ask what concerns and hopes the people of the regions we study have; how should we address comparatively the global role of mass and digital media in contemporary politics and conflict, as well as processes of exclusion, inequalities, development, participation and empowerment.

By considering how, where and by whom media is produced, consumed and used, you will develop advanced knowledge and understanding of the theoretical, methodological and empirical issues involved in the analysis of non-western media and communications within historical and contemporary contexts.

You will address alternative ways to situate mediated articulations of agency and subjectivity in non-Western contexts through engaging with various texts challenging the hegemonic claims of mainstream Western media theory that insists the rest of the world subscribe to a narrow exclusive vision of the world.

Why study at SOAS? 

  • SOAS' research in film and media has been ranked in the top 20 in the UK in the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021
  • We are ranked 6th in the UK for employability (QS World University Rankings 2023)
  • More than a third of our research publications assessed as 4* (world-leading)

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Students must take 180 credits comprised of 120 taught credits (including core, compulsory and option modules) and a 60 credit, 10,000 word dissertation. All students must take the core modules in addition to Qualitative Research Methods in Media and Communication.

Further options include a wide range of media and media-related courses from a comprehensive list offered by the Centre for Global Media and Communications and other constituent units of the School of Law, Gender and Media. All courses are assessed via written assignments.

Important notice

The information on the website reflects the intended programme structure against the given academic session. The modules are indicative options of the content students can expect and are/have been previously taught as part of these programmes.

However, this information is published a long time in advance of enrolment and module content and availability is subject to change. 

Core

Compulsory

Guided options List B

0-45 credits from List B

Guided options List A

Students must take 30 credits from List A as a guided option

Open options

Students can take a maximum of 30 credits from the School-wide open options list, including languages.

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Knowledge

  • Ability to address the role of global media in Asia, Africa and the Middle East without pre-assuming media are all powerful
  • Understand the theoretical underpinnings and debates on the role of media and communication in politics, social lives, cultures and transformations.
  • Address the dynamics of the global, the regional and the local in a continuously changing media environment.
  • Be able to analytically disaggregate economic, political, social and cultural strands of global media and communication in a neo-liberal environment.
  • Address the role of the media in identity formations, representations and cultures.

Intellectual (thinking) skills

  • To be critical and precise in their assessment of evidence, and to understand through practice what documents and electronic sources can and cannot tell us. Such skills should improve and be refined throughout the programme.
  • Question theories and interpretations, however authoritative, and critically reassess evidence for themselves. Students will learn how to question and challenge the Euro-centric dominant global media and communication approaches and provide evidence-based critique that takes into account different histories, including colonial and post-colonial histories, of media and communication in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. These skills should improve and be refined throughout the programme.
  • Critically interrogate situated empirical examples of specific media and communication practices in Asia, Africa, Middle East

Subject-based practical skills

  • Communicate effectively in writing
  • Retrieve, sift and select information from a variety of conventional and electronic sources
  • Communicate orally to a group. Listen and discuss ideas introduced during seminars and classes.
  • Practise research techniques in a variety of specialized research libraries and institutes.
  • Have developed some new competencies in digital media production and dissemination

Transferable skills

  • Write good essays and dissertations
  • Structure and communicate ideas effectively both orally and in writing
  • Understand unconventional ideas
  • Summarize your arguments in a coherent and critical way.
  • Study a variety of written and digital materials, in libraries, on-line and research libraries of a kind they will not have used as undergraduates.
  • Present material orally to a group.
  • Have developed a range of on-line competencies

SOAS Library

SOAS Library is one of the world's most important academic libraries for the study of Africa, Asia and the Middle East, attracting scholars from all over the world. The Library houses over 1.2 million volumes, together with significant archival holdings, special collections and a growing network of electronic resources.

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Title Deadline date
Tibawi Trust Award
Felix Non-Indian Scholarship
Felix Scholarships
Sasakawa Studentships
SOAS Master's Scholarships (Home)

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Graduates from the Centre for Global Media and Communications gain expertise in media, communications and film production within a global framework. Graduates develop a portfolio of transferable skills including communication skills, interpersonal skills and team work, which are highly respected by employers.

Recent graduates have been hired by:

  • Africa Mediaworks Ltd.
  • Al Jazeera
  • Associated Press
  • BBC
  • Breakthrough Breast Cancer
  • British Film Institute
  • Channel 5
  • Comic Relief
  • Cordoba African Film Festival
  • Discovery Communications
  • Equality Now
  • Hackney Film Festival
  • International Channel Shanghai
  • Internews Europe
  • Merlin
  • Novus
  • Office for National Statistics
  • Royal College of Art
  • The Institute of Ismaili Studies
  • Unilever
  • United Nations
  • Westminster City Council

Find out about our Careers Service.