Pop culture lives!

Janice Haynes, assistant professor of communication and social sciences at 黑料大事记 State College, teaches Zombiepocalypse; Zombies in Popular Culture (FYI 169AM).
Janice Haynes, assistant professor of communication and social sciences at 黑料大事记 State College, teaches Zombiepocalypse; Zombies in Popular Culture (FYI 169AM). (Photo by Daniel Binkard/黑料大事记 State College)

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CHADRON – There’s a reason course titles such as Zombiepocalypse and Gaze Anatomy sound like they’re more at home on television or movie screens than in the classrooms at 黑料大事记 State College. Episodes dealing with zombies or hospital dramas entertain viewers, however, according to Communication and Social Sciences Assistant Professor Dr. Janice Haynes, pop culture flashpoints can also be effective tools to lead students to think critically during First Year Inquiry (FYI) classes.

鈥淲e want students to think deeply about a topic and multiple ways on how to look at that topic,鈥 said Haynes, who studied at the University of Houston before earning her Ph.D. from Massachusetts at Amherst. 鈥淭hese discussions based around pop culture are a way we can get students to get really interested and engage them in a topic, but to also teach them to do critical inquiry.鈥

黑料大事记 State students must complete six hours of FYI courses, but they are not discipline specific. Rather, the courses focus on critical thinking and gaining a deeper understanding of particular issues or problems.

Haynes, who also teaches students how to be good citizens on social media and respond appropriately to criticism or disagreements in Constructing Digital Citzens (CA 336), said she is able to use pop culture and media to help students explore different ways of thinking.

鈥淎ny form of media is good to address questions because there鈥檚 not always one solution or one way to look at something,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 can watch any film and have a reaction that is different from anyone else. A lot of how we experience media has to do with our own experiences, based on our gender, race, sexuality and other defining characteristics. Then, if we add rigor and interpretative analysis, students will use research to interpret what is happening and how that relates to culture and society.鈥

Haynes, a self-professed fan of zombie films, said pop culture has the ability to reflect current social anxieties. That idea is explored in depth during her class Zombiepocalypse (FYI 169AM) this spring. She said zombies are a metaphor for people who are seen as unordinary.

鈥淚f we look at post Sept. 11, there鈥檚 an explosion of zombie films and apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic films. In the context of the last 10 years, there鈥檚 been even more due to the wars in the Middle East and the financial crisis,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow, all these fears and social anxieties are being translated into our pop culture. FYI courses are about teaching students how to ask questions through an interdisciplinary approach, how to research, think critically and work collaboratively. So if you have something that students are interested in like zombies, it is a little easier to engage students and teach critical inquiry.鈥

Haynes teaches students that zombies can become a metaphor for a variety of social groups, including slaves, immigrants, and outcasts, and even represent the collective loss of humanity. The class also discusses what viral outbreaks can symbolize and report on critical writing.

鈥淭he origination of zombies came from voodoo and that began in the 1930s when 鈥榃hite Zombie鈥 was released at the same time the U.S. invaded Haiti. They鈥檙e not flesh eating zombies in the movie, they have spells cast upon them that turn them into slaves. So Haiti was the first colonial nation to have a successful rebellion,鈥 Haynes said. 鈥淚f you think about it, if colonizers turn people into slaves then the representation of slave labor and the reinforcement of colonialism shows how people become mindless workers.鈥

Another media literacy course taught through the lens of pop culture is Gaze Anatomy (FYI 169AN).

Haynes said the class, offered again in Fall 2017, will teach students how they鈥檙e influenced by pop culture. One way to do that is studying psychoanalytic theory. Haynes said the class will watch Alfred Hitchcock鈥檚 film 鈥淩ear Window,鈥 and compare it with Maggie Greenwald鈥檚 鈥淭he Ballad of Little Jo.鈥 鈥淩ear Window鈥 deals with a male protagonist voyeuristically observing his neighbors through a window, while 鈥淭he Ballad of Little Jo鈥 is a true account of a woman who travels West to avoid persecution for having a child out of wedlock. The female protagonist lives disguised as a man and eventually falls in love with another man.

鈥淭he idea of the gaze is complicated. It is not just about gender, it鈥檚 about so many other things and they can all be different,鈥 Haynes said. 鈥淲e look at that through the lens of large structures of race, class, gender and sexuality. We talk extensively how media plays a role in influencing how we think about things.鈥

Haynes said the class also watches television series and discusses critical readings related to forms of media.

鈥淲e watch television series such as 鈥楾he Simpsons,鈥 鈥楩amily Guy,鈥 and 鈥楽ex and the City,鈥 and compare them to older shows or characters such as Archie Bunker,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e also look to advertisements for symbiotic analysis.鈥

One thing not up for analysis are the names of the FYIs. Haynes said the catchy names describe the courses and pique interests of students.

鈥淭he courses are named the way they are to attract students,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e want them to sound interesting because students are required to take FYIs. But the names of the courses don鈥檛 indicate the rigor of the courses. You can look at any subject through pop culture and we do that in an academic way.鈥

-Alex Helmbrecht, Director of College Relations

Category: Campus News, Social Sciences