Surname 1
Name
Course
Tutor
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Black Study "Section A" "Section B"
Films have at all times captivated me; they are a way to get away from the ordinary and
can take someone anywhere. Most films are fascinating; fantasy, chick flicks, horror,
documentaries, comedy, and romance— you name it; nearly anything can hold someone's
attention. Films can make someone cry, laugh, scream, and even jump off the seat; they evoke
emotion and have the capability to influence people's thoughts as well as actions. in spite of my
love for the cinema as entertainment, I only became interested in films recently on a more
academic level. My college career has been shaped by media intentions, relations, and inner
workings. I have decisively examined all sorts of media, from print advertisements and
commercials, to film, to television shows and everywhere in between. Since this attentive gaze
was anticipated of me in class, it was just expected that I would employ a vital eye on media as I
saw in it in my daily life.
The intricacy of globalization challenges the understanding of culture along with identity
as they are reshaped by marginal identity relations that turn out to be ever more fluid across
international space. Ex-colonial South Korea, growing in financial power and international
cultural control mostly in Asia, has turned out to be a home to Asian immigrants. With the
changing ethnoscape, media conversation comprises immigrant identities along with their