Visualizing Place: Representations of Seattle/PNW in Popular Media

a Discovery Core Experience

BCORE 117 (Arts & Humanities)

About This Course

This course examines the portrayal of Seattle and the Pacific Northwest (PNW) in various forms of popular media, including film, television, literature, music, and digital platforms. Students will explore how these representations influence and reflect cultural, social, and environmental understandings of the region.

What Will We Be Doing?

Through a combination of media screenings, readings, discussions, and assignments, students will critically examine how place is visualized and its effects on audience perceptions. The course covers a range of genres and media types to survey the PNW’s depiction in popular culture. Students will gain a nuanced understanding of how Seattle and the PNW are represented across different media and the broader implications of these portrayals on regional and cultural identity.

Professor Samuel Yum (He/him/his)

School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences

About Professor Yum

TEACHING: Advanced Media Production Workshop-Visual Storytelling, Working with Video, Media and Communications Techniques, Hollywood Cinema and Genres, History of American Documentary Film, Introduction to Film Narrative.

Education

  • M.A., Museology, University of Washington
  • M.A., Anthropology, Columbia University
  • B.A., Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania

Contact