This module provides an advanced introduction to interdisciplinary perspectives on the relationship between visual culture and practices of everyday life. It explores how digital and visual media cultures reflect and shape everyday experiences of the world, from those that relate to our sense of self and identity, the rhythms that structure our lives, the way we move through, perceive or engage with the spaces and landscapes we routinely inhabit, or to the sensory, affective and material impacts of media forms and practices. With a focus on visual culture and the everyday, the module draws from approaches in visual and cultural anthropology, cultural studies, Mass Observation and everyday life studies, cultural geography, visual sociology, and more to critically examine how we make sense of our everyday worlds and how visual culture is embedded and embodied in daily practices and habits. In a contemporary world where the mediatisation of everyday life seemingly extends to every sphere of routine activity (such that at times we might not be aware of its presence at all), the critical and creative project of visualising culture and everyday life provides a valuable lens through which to understand the challenges and complexities of “what it means to live a media life” (Mark Deuze 2011).