Chair
Jennifer Good
Professors Emeriti
Barry K. Grant, Jim Leach
Professor
Marian Bredin
Associate Professors
Jacqueline Botterill, Liz Clarke, Tim Dun, Derek Foster, Greg Gillespie, Jennifer Good, Russell Johnston, Anthony Kinik, Peter Lester, Sarah A. Matheson, Christie Milliken, Bohdan Y. Nebesio, Karen L. Smith
Assistant Professors
Dale A. Bradley, Kate Cassidy, Michelle Chen, Duncan Koerber
Adjunct Faculty
Nick Baxter-Moore, Joan Nicks, Jeannette Sloniowski
Academic Administrator
Josephine (Pina) McDonnell
Academic Advisor and Internship Coordinator
Jordan Belanger/Megan Johnson
Digital Media Coordinator
Connor Wilkes
General Information
Administrative Assistant
Tamara Milicevic
905-688-5550, extension 4290
Scotiabank Hall 309
brocku.ca/cpcf
The Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film offers four separate programs of study in Business Communication, Media and Communication Studies, Film Studies, and Popular Culture Studies. A four-year program leading to the Bachelor of Arts (BA) Honours degree, a 4 Year BA with Major, and a three-year program leading to the BA Pass degree is offered in all four programs. Majors in the Department may complete a Concentration in Digital Culture. Minor programs are available in Digital Culture, Film Studies, Media Studies and Popular Culture for majors in other Departments/Centres as well as a Certificate in Film Studies. In addition, the Department is involved in programs with community colleges which offer students the opportunity to earn a BA Honours Communication Studies, BA Honours Popular Culture or a BA with Major Film Studies degree and a college diploma or certificate.
Communication Studies
Business Communication
Students in Business Communication must attain a minimum 60 percent major average to continue in the program, and a minimum of 70 percent major average by the end of Year 3 for approval to Year 4 Studies (Honours).
Business Communication is an interdisciplinary program combining the study of communication with a study of some aspects of business. The program aims to equip the student with a sound theoretical basis for analysing and practicing communication within the business environment.
Please consult the Communication Studies entry for a listing of courses and program requirements.
Media and Communication Studies
Students in Media and Communication Studies must attain a minimum 60 percent major average to continue in the program, and a minimum of 70 percent major average by the end of Year 3 for approval to Year 4 Studies (Honours).
Media and Communication Studies is an interdisciplinary program that focuses on the impact of media and communication in the creation of meaning, identity and social change, emphasizing the study of media content, audiences and institutions in their political, economic, and social contexts in Canada and elsewhere
Please consult the Communication Studies entry for a listing of courses and program requirements.
Film Studies
Students in Film Studies must attain a minimum 60 percent major average to continue in the program, and a minimum of 70 percent major average by the end of Year 3 for approval to Year 4 Studies (Honours).
Film Studies is a sequence of critical and historical courses that examine a variety of approaches to film. The courses explore the nature of film language and develop an analytical perspective on film as both an art and a medium. Other courses explore 117 issues and theories in popular culture. Students may have opportunities to engage in media production in selected upper year courses.
Please consult the Film Studies entry for a listing of courses and program requirements.
Popular Culture Studies
Students in Popular Culture Studies must attain a minimum of 60 percent major average to continue in the program, and a minimum of 70 percent major average by the end of Year 3 for approval to Year 4 Studies (Honours).
The study of popular culture offers critical and historical courses which examine popular culture and its relation to folk, mass and high culture. The undergraduate program in Popular Culture Studies is interdisciplinary in nature, bringing together theoretical and analytical perspectives drawn from both the humanities and the social sciences, and applying them to the study of diverse cultural forms including film, television, social media, literature, music and advertising and their economic, political and historical contexts
Please consult the Popular Culture Studies entry for a listing of courses and program requirements.