Jean Baudrillard and the Limits of Critical Media Literacy
Abstract
Marxian education scholars have successfully established critical media literacy as a specific response to concerns about contemporary media's problems and possibilities with regard to youth. This development has made a significant contribution to the intersection of media, critical theory, and pedagogy. Yet, the theoretical foundations of critical media literacy limit its capacity to confront the trajectory of contemporary media and communication technologies. Here, Kip Kline offers Jean Baudrillard's media theory as a possible corrective to the undertheorization of media at the level of form that contributes to the inefficacy of critical media literacy.
Number of times cited: 2
- Jayne Cubbage, Unlocking the Liberation Doctrine in Media Literacy and Higher Education, Handbook of Research on Media Literacy in Higher Education Environments, 10.4018/978-1-5225-4059-5.ch019, (332-349)
- Pierre FASTREZ and Thibault PHILIPPETTE, Un modèle pour repenser l’éducation critique aux médias à l’ère du numérique, Tic & société, Vol. 11, N° 1, (85), (2017).




