Monday 5 December 2011

Media Concepts revision notes.

Multiple choice questions:
Mass culture theory:
-          Pierre Bourdieu; asks how logic of taste and preference work challenges notions of innate taste or ‘authentic’ sensibilities.
-          Different forms of culture provide different forms of pleasure.
-          Tastes and notions of quality are socially constructed. Used differently by different groups to gain status.
-          Cultural Capital; invest into consumption practices- acquiring status – producing symbolic capital of power. Can be acquired through education and its value can shift when context is changed.

Saussure/Signs – semiotics:
-          Language not just a way of classifying objects in an external world
-          Words only have meaning as parts of systems  i.e. languages
-          Langue = the system or language
-          Parole = actual utterances of words
-          Signifier (concept)+signified (word)=sign
-          Signs only have meaning within particular systems of meaning
-          Denotation and connotation.
-          Pierce: Symbolic; signs in which the relationship between the sign and its meaning are totally arbitary, Iconic; signs that resemble their meaning in some way, and Indexical signs; signs that indicate what they stand for.

Structuralism (Wright, Eco, Barthes):
-          Propp - 'narratemes' - he designed a structure of narratemes made up of 8 character roles, and 31 basic narratemes.
-          Todorov supports Propp, claiming all stories have the same universal formal properties.
-          Wright = westerns and Eco = James Bond.

Fabula/syuzhet  (Bordwell):
-          Fabula is deducted from Syuzhet
-          Syuzhet is an employment of narrative and fabula is the chronological order of the retold events.

Genre Theory:
-          Another way to explore the media text constructed meaning.
-          Genre is a signifying system; a paradigm (lists of possible signs from which particular signs are selected to form syntagms).
-          Agents of ‘ideological closure’
-          Limit meaning potential; ‘Contract’ between producer and audiences as to content; Annoying when broken.
-          There are usually generic features to genres. But there is also genre hybridity.
-          Genre changes and develops over time.

Political economy:
-          To fully understand media and cultural texts we have to examine the material conditions in which they are produced
-          Relate texts to wider social relationships and power
-          Hard power - control of capital, military, legal systems, etc.
-          Soft power - symbols, discourses, the cultural and semiological
-          Power – works at three levels
-          1. The ability to influence decisions
-          2. The ability to set the agenda in the first place
-          3. Structural power  - the effect an institution has by simply ‘being there’
Hegemony
-          Power – works at three levels
-          The ability to influence decisions
-          The ability to set the agenda in the first place
-          Structural power  - the effect an institution has by simply ‘being there’
-          Hegemony - when popular ideas or ‘common sense’ reflect the interests of the powerful ideology. Also known as ‘culturalism’.
-          Hegemony never finally secured.
-          Resistance to dominant ideologies. Media and cultural texts can be sites of resistance.


Stuart Hall:
-          Popular culture; he suggests the boundaries of popular culture become a site of contestation.
-          Constructions of art are merely weapons of power struggle.
-          Encoding and decoding model;
-          Dominant : Share's the text's code, and accepts/reproduces the text.
-          Negotiated - partly shares the codes but may resist/modify the code to reflect their own life
-          Oppositional - understands the reading but does not share/deal with it.

Lister:
-          Audience identity; new media-virtual reality.
-          Identities and communities online; new media provides new ways of experiencing self and relating to groups in society. ‘In touch but, never touching. As deeply connected as they are profoundly alienated.  
-        Being anonymous; different mediation allow is to express different parts of our identity. Different communications effect how we present ourselves.
-          Belonging; online communities create a sense of belonging and use them as an antidote to social fragmentation.

The Chicago school:
-          Offer a mode of regulation: law; social norms; the market; architecture.
-          Social norms; the prescribed and proscribed forms of media of behaviour. They aren’t administered through authority.
-          Markets; availability and prices regulate by effecting how we consume or produce. Independent of laws and social norms.
-          Architecture; forms of constraints that prevent us doing things – passwords regulate our use of networks. They are pre-action constraints – social norms and law are post action constraints.
-          Changes to one will affect the regulated activity, they all regulate to different degrees.

Narrative:
-          A communicative act – narrative involves a ‘teller’ and a ‘listener’.
-          All narratives involve a sequence of events (they are located in time).
-          All narratives are constructed.

Framing and priming:
-          Framing: helps to construct the ‘preferred’ reading. It’s the media perspective.
-          Priming: endorses certain responses to active certain thoughts (in the preferred readers mind)

Computer mediated communications:
-          The separation between reality and online reality.
-        

Todorov – structuralism
-          Believes there are common structures in the narrative of a story. Equilibrium – disequilibrium –equilibrium.
-          The structure of narratives tends to suggest that the restitution of the status quo is ‘normal’ and ‘appropriate’
-          Suggests ideology.

Barthes
-          Believes narratives have up to 5 distinct codes operating below the surface.
-          This includes enigma code (meaning) - this activates the viewer or readers interest in guessing the meaning or ending.
-          Enigmas or puzzles are introduced, resolved, reintroduced.
-          Symbolic codes (through which stories are symbolically represented)
-          Cultural codes – narratives frequently draw upon ‘authoritative knowledge’ or popular shared assumptions.
-          Myth - wrestling
-          Myth is political and ideological.
-          Codes which are taken for granted and seen not as codes but as ‘natural.
-          Signs placed in different codes operate in different ways

Uses and gratifications
-          Katz and Blumer.
-          Audience can control media exposure.
-          People use media for what they want, his may be complex and conflicting.
-          May be expressed in different ways:
-          1. To reinforce existing views
-          2. To identify opposing views
-          3. To be immersed in a community
-          4. To escape reality

Chomsky and Herman:
-          Outlined a propaganda model; focuses on the effects of US capitalist ideology on agenda setting in the media.
-          They said there were five main filters or ways media is given consent in society.
-          By size, concentrated ownership, owner wealth and profit orientation of the dominant mass media firms.
-          By advertising as the primary income source of the mass media.
-          By the reliance on the media on information provided by government, business and experts.
-          By ‘flak’ as means of disciplining the media.
-          By anticommunism as control of mechanism.
-          ‘Flak’refers to negative responses to media or news programmes. The ability to produce flack is the greatest for the powerful institutions most committed to the capitalist cause.
-          Media professionals are puppets of capitalism.
-          Everything media professionals do can be explained in terms of ideology and its effects.
-          Ideology explains media effects take many theoretical forms.
-          Suggest there is a ruling class and that this ruling class controls the media and their effects.

Thursday 1 December 2011

News Writing: 'hit' or 'collision'

We were asked to write a news story from a sussex police press release, this is what i came up with;

A 13-year-old boy died after being hit by a car in sussex, yesterday afternoon.
The 62-year-old driver and his passenger, were both uninjured. The boy was rushed to East Surrey Hospital with serious injuries, where he later died.
The driver of the Land Rover was arrested, at the scene, on suspicion of careless driving and has been released on bail until January.

In one of the examples Brian chose to show to the group, 'hit by a car' was discussed to decide whether or not it was the right phase to use as opposed to 'collision'. Turns out we can, but can sometimes be a problem because it suggests there is someone to blame and is defamatory.
Mentioning the car was a Land Rover was bought up; it doesn't need to be included because what car it was is irrelevant, speed is, even though Land Rovers are bigger cars and look as though they could do more damage than your average smart car....