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Questions and Answers

According to Roland Barthes' theory of semiotics, what process occurs when symbolic constructions become self-evident?

  • Denotation
  • Naturalisation (correct)
  • Connotation
  • Signification

How does Tzvetan Todorov's narratology describe the structure of narratives?

  • A chaotic series of events with no discernible order
  • A linear progression from introduction to resolution
  • A cyclical pattern with no clear beginning or end
  • A movement from equilibrium to disruption and back to equilibrium (correct)

According to Steve Neale's genre theory, what is a defining characteristic of media genres?

  • Strict adherence to established conventions
  • A balance of repetition of codes and conventions with elements of difference and change (correct)
  • Total independence from economic, institutional, and industrial contexts
  • Complete originality and lack of repetition

In Claude Lévi-Strauss' structuralism, how is meaning often produced?

<p>Through the resolution of binary opposites (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

What concept does Jean Baudrillard use to describe mediated images that seem more real than reality?

<p>Hyperreality (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Stuart Hall's theories of representation, what is a common effect of stereotyping?

<p>It reduces people and things to a few simple characteristics or traits (D)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to David Gauntlett's theories of identity, what role does media play in shaping our identities?

<p>It provides tools and resources that we use to shape our identities (D)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Liesbet van Zoonen, how is gender constructed?

<p>Through discourse, changing depending on cultural and historical context (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to bell hooks, what is feminism primarily?

<p>A political commitment (D)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Judith Butler's theory of gender performativity, what is the relationship between gender identity and its expressions?

<p>Gender identity is constructed by the expressions of gender (A)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Paul Gilroy's theories around ethnicity and Post-colonial Theory, what is the legacy of colonialism?

<p>Colonial discourses continue to inform contemporary attitudes to race and ethnicity (A)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Curran and Seaton's Power and Media Industries Theory, what is the primary driver of media companies?

<p>Gaining profit and power (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Livingstone and Lunt's Regulation Theory, what is the underlying struggle in media policy?

<p>Balancing the interests of citizens and consumers (D)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Hesmondhalgh's Cultural Industries Theory, how do media companies try to minimize risk and maximize audiences?

<p>Through vertical and horizontal integration (D)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Albert Bandura's Media Effects Theory, how do audiences respond to media modelling?

<p>They acquire new attitudes, styles of conduct, and emotional responses (B)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to George Gerbner's Cultivation Theory, how does repeated exposure to media affect audiences?

<p>It reinforces mainstream values and ideologies (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Stuart Hall's Reception Theory, what is the 'negotiated position' in decoding meaning?

<p>The legitimacy of the encoder's message is acknowledged, but the message is adapted (B)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Henry Jenkins' theory of fandom, how do fans participate in culture?

<p>They are active participants in the construction and circulation of textual meanings (C)</p> Signup and view all the answers

According to Clay Shirky's "End of Audience" Theory, how has the internet changed the relationship between media and individuals?

<p>Audiences have the ability to 'speak back to' media (A)</p> Signup and view all the answers

Integrating Jenkins' and Shirky's theories, how do fans utilize online platforms in their cultural participation?

<p>To actively engage with media, creating content and sharing it, thus blurring lines between consumers and producers. (A)</p> Signup and view all the answers

Flashcards

Semiotics

The study of signs and meaning in media.

Narratology

The study of narrative structures in media.

Genre Theory

Genres follow codes and conventions, but include difference.

Structuralism

Underlying structures through which meanings are made.

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Postmodernism

Boundaries between real and mediated worlds have collapsed.

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Theories of Representation

The production of meaning through language and signs.

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Theories of Identity

Media provides tools to shape our identities.

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Gender and Discourse

Gender is constructed through discourse.

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Feminist Theory

Smash the patriarchy.

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Performativity Theory

Identity is performatively constructed through expressions.

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Post-colonial Theory

Colonial discourses still inform attitudes about race.

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Power and Media Industries Theory

Media driven by power and profit.

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Regulation Theory

Exploration of media policy.

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Cultural Industries Theory

Media used to minimize risk and maximize audiences.

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Media Effects Theory

Media shapes people.

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Cultivation Theory

Exposure over time shapes audience views.

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Reception Theory

Encoding by producers and decoding by audience.

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Fandom

Fans participate in culture.

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'End of Audience' Theory

Audience can 'speak back'.

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Study Notes

  • Semiotics

    • Roland Barthes
    • Study of signs and meaning
    • Texts communicate their ideas through signification
      • Signs function at a literal level (signifier, denotation) and a figurative level (signified, connotation)
      • Exposure to certain symbolic constructions can become self-evident, as the sign becomes myth through naturalization
  • Narratology

    • Tzvetan Todorov
    • Study of narrative
    • All narratives share a basic structure, moving from one equilibrium to another
      • These two states of equilibrium are separated by disruption or imbalance
      • The way that narratives resolve can have ideological significance
  • Genre Theory

    • Steve Neale
    • The classification of media products
    • Genres are dominated by repetition of codes and conventions but must also incorporate difference, variation and change
      • Genres change as they borrow from and overlap with each other (hybridity and subgenres)
      • Genres exist within specific economic, institutional and industrial contexts
  • Structuralism

    • Claude Levi-Strauss
    • The underlying structures through which meanings are made
    • Texts can be understood through an analysis of their underlying structure
      • Meaning is often produced through oppositional pairs (e.g. good vs. evil)
      • The resolution of these binary opposites can have ideological significance
  • Postmodernism

    • Jean Baudrillard
    • The making of meanings in a post-structuralist world
    • The boundaries between the "real" and "mediated" worlds have collapsed
      • Signs are a process of signification with no signifier underlying them; they no longer refer to anything "real" or "literal"
      • Mediated images now seem more "real" than the reality they supposedly represent (hyperreality)
  • Theories of Representation

    • Stuart Hall
    • How representations are constructed
    • Representation is the production of meaning through language (a system of signs)
      • Stereotyping reduces people and things to a few simple characteristics or traits
      • Stereotyping tends to occur where there is disparity of power, with subordinated/excluded groups being different or "other"
  • Theories of Identity

    • David Gauntlett
    • Media help us to construct our identities
    • Media provides us with 'tools' and resources that we use to shape our identities
      • In the past, these media toolboxes were simple; as the mediated world has become more complicated, we now have a wide range of media models - a pick-and-mix of different ideas that we can choose from
  • Feminist Theory

    • Liesbet van Zoonen
    • Gender is constructed through discourse
    • Gender, as a product of discourse, changes depending on cultural and historical context
      • The objectification of women's bodies is core to Western patriarchal culture
      • The codes used in mainstream media to construct the male body are different from the mediated/objectified female body
  • Feminist Theory

    • bell hooks
    • Smash the patriarchy
    • Feminism is a political commitment rather than a lifestyle choice
      • The intersection of race and class (as well as sex) determine the extent to which individuals are exploited or oppressed
  • Theories of Gender Performativity

    • Judith Butler
    • Identity is a performance
    • Identity is performatively constructed by the very "acts" or "expressions" that are thought to be its results
      • There is no inherent gender identity behind the expressions of gender
      • Performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition or ritual
  • Theories around ethnicity and Post-colonial Theory

    • Paul Gilroy
    • Exploring the legacy of colonialism and imperialism
    • Colonial discourses continue to inform contemporary attitudes to race and ethnicity
      • "Civilisationism" constructs racial hierarchies and sets up binary oppositions based on notions of "other"ness
  • Power and Media Industries Theory

    • James Curran and Jean Seaton
    • Media is driven by the logic of power and profit
    • Media is controlled by a small number of companies primarily concerned with gaining profit and power
      • Media concentration typically inhibits or limits variety, creativity and quality
      • Socially diverse patterns of ownership help to create conditions for more varied and adventurous media products
  • Regulation Theory

    • Sonia Livingstone and Peter Lunt
    • Exploration of media policy
    • There is an underlying struggle between the need to further the interests of citizens (protection from harmful material) and the interests of consumers (choice, value, competition)
      • The rise of media conglomerations and the emerging production, distribution and marketing of digital media have placed traditional approaches to media regulation at risk
  • Cultural Industries Theory

    • David Hesmondhalgh
    • Exploration of media industries
    • Media companies try to minimize risk and maximize audiences through vertical and horizontal integration and through the form of their media/cultural products (through genre, serial format and by including stars)
      • The largest companies and conglomerates now operate across a number of media industries
      • The Internet, and its radical potential, has been partially contained by its incorporation into large, profit-oriented cultural companies
  • Media Effects Theory

    • Albert Bandura
    • The effects that media have on audiences
    • Media is capable of implanting ideas directly into the minds of its audiences
      • Audiences respond to the modelling in media and, thereby, acquire new attitudes, styles of conduct and emotional responses
      • Media representation of transgressive or antisocial behaviour can lead audience members to imitate those forms of behaviour
  • Cultivation Theory

    • George Gerbner
    • The effects that media have on audiences
    • Repeated exposure to patterns of representation over long periods of time can shape and influence the way the audience perceives the world around them (i.e. by cultivating particular points of view and opinions)
      • Cultivation reinforces mainstream, or dominant, values and ideologies
  • Reception Theory

    • Stuart Hall
    • Exploring encoding and decoding meaning
    • Communication is a process involving encoding by producers and decoding by the audience
      • There are three hypothetical positions from which meanings can be decoded:
        • The dominant-hegemonic position: the encoder's intended meaning is fully understood and accepted
        • The negotiated position: the legitimacy of the encoder's message is acknowledge, but the message is adapted to better fit the decoder's individual experiences or context
        • The oppositional position: the encoder's message is understood, but the decoder disagrees with it, reading it in a contrary or oppositional way
  • Fandom

    • Henry Jenkins
    • Exploring fan's participation in culture
    • Fans are active participants in the construction and circulation of textual meanings
      • Fans also appropriate texts and read them in ways that are not fully authorised by the media producers ("textual poaching")
      • Fans construct their social and cultural identities by borrowing and inflecting mass culture images and participate in a culture that offers a vital social dimension
  • 'End of Audience' Theory

    • Clay Shirky
    • Exploring the relationship between digital media production and consumption
    • The Internet and digital technologies have a profound effect on the relations between media and individuals
      • In the age of the internet, audience members or no longer passive consumers of mass media content: consumers now have the ability to "speak back to" media in various ways
      • Media consumers engage in the creating and sharing of content with one another

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