麻豆国产

In this class, students debate cancel culture鈥檚 impact on today鈥檚 society

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The topic of 鈥渃ancel culture鈥 is not new in the public discourse. But Sergei A. Samoilenko, an assistant professor of communication at George Mason 麻豆国产, believes he can take the discussion in a new direction.聽

Sergei A. Samoilenko. Photo provided

Samoilenko, co-founder of Mason鈥檚 , teaches a COMM 386 Special Topics in Political Communication course titled 鈥淐ancel Culture in Public and Political Communication.鈥

Samoilenko said the course was designed from scratch, and believes it is one of only a few special-topic courses offered anywhere nationally that examines cancel culture in a systematic and scholarly manner.

The topic has even more resonance for him as a foreign national because he said he sees it as something embedded in the American culture.

鈥淚 view cancel culture as a social conflict that involves discussion and reexamination of some moral values and views on history,鈥 Samoilenko said. 鈥淭he goals of the course were to understand cancel culture as a sociological and communication phenomenon. I structured the class to give students a chance to voice their opinions.鈥

鈥淚 really learned a lot from my fellow students because they would ask great questions,鈥 said Deirdre Jane Prigge, who is majoring in communication with a concentration in public relations.People shared personal stories where they had experienced public shaming and ostracism.鈥

Deirdre Jane Prigge. Photo provided

Students were also asked to write reflective papers on such topics as cancel culture and celebrities, cancel culture as a social justice movement, or cancel culture as a social media phenomenon.

鈥淲e are all equally impacted by things like public shaming or bullying,鈥 said Prigge. 鈥淲e had to carefully consider whether shaming was morally wrong or morally right.鈥

reports that Americans are split about cancel culture.

鈥淪ome people think it鈥檚 a form of punishment, others think it鈥檚 a form of social justice, and there are those who believe it doesn鈥檛 exist.鈥 Samoilenko said.

Elise Hall, a senior communication major concentrating on political communication, said her biggest takeaway from the class is that 鈥渃ancel culture oftentimes gets taken too far, social media and band-wagoning makes for a dangerous mix. Social media requires little effort to spread information to our audience鈥攚hether that鈥檚 facts, opinions, or misinformation.鈥

Elise Hall. Photo provided

鈥淚 enjoyed a discussion we had about moral entrepreneurs鈥攑eople who have a certain moral idea, or an opinion about what鈥檚 right and wrong,鈥 Prigge said. 鈥淭hey feel so strongly and go around trying to enforce it.鈥

Samoilenko said the concept of cancel culture was聽essentially brought to prominence by social activists promoting movement campaigns #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter. 鈥淏oth viral hashtag campaigns called for social justice and strived to mobilize supporters around two fundamental social issues: sexual abuse and racism.鈥

鈥淭his course raised more questions than provided answers, which is great because we are still learning and shaping our opinion about cancel culture,鈥 said Samoilenko, who is offering the class again in summer 2022. 鈥淲e are feeling the pulse of the society here.鈥

Prigge created the student-driven , which can be heard on iTunes, Apple Podcast and Spotify. 鈥淚 was actually preparing for the launch of CARP Radio while taking Professor Samoilenko class, so our in-class discussions gave me great ideas for topics to cover on the podcast,鈥 Prigge said.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 predict the future of cancel culture, but we can discuss what makes someone vulnerable to attacks, and how we can strengthen our reputations,鈥 Prigge said.