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Chapter 2
Perspectives on Mass Communication
Key terms
Paradigm: a model or pattern that a person uses to analyze
something
                  1. Functional approach: emphasizes the way that audiences
                     use mass communication and the benefits that people
                     receive from media consumption
                  2. Critical/cultural approach: examines the underlying
                     power relationships in media exposure and stresses the
                     many meanings and interpretations that the audience
                     members find in media content
                  3. Empirical approach: uses the techniques of the social
                     sciences, such as experiments and surveys, to investigate
                     the cognitive, attitudinal, and behavioral effects of mass
                     communication*
*the empirical approach is covered later on in the semester. We will only be discussing the functional and critical/cultural approach in this chapter
Why use a paradigm?
1. It provides us with a consistent perspective
   from which to examine mass
   communication
2. It generates concepts that are helpful in
   understanding media behavior
3. It helps us identify what is or is not
   important in the process
Example: The Apprentice
The functional approach would ask why
people watch this show. What about the
show appeals to men, or women? Does
the audience learn anything? Do people
like to play along? Do they talk about
the show with their friends?



The critical/cultural approach would
investigate the role editing and casting
plays in creating a reality experience,
how does the show portray capitalism?
Does it suggest wealth is an important
value? Does it glorify competition over
cooperation?
Functional analysis

Asks, “why?”


•Why do you watch TV?
•Why do you go to the movies?
•Why do you use Facebook?
Mass communication in society
•   Mass media is pervasive
•   Different people use different media for different purposes
•   Society requires communication
•   Function/dysfunction

Two types of analyses:
1. Macroanalysis: take the perspective of a sociologist and look
   through a wide- angle lens to consider the functions performed
   by the mass media for the entire society
2. Microanalysis: look through a close- up lens at the individual
   receivers of the content, the audience, and ask them to report
   on how they use mass media
Functions of Mass Communication for
              Society
•   Surveillance: the news and information
    role of the media*. The media as sentinels
    and lookouts. On any given day, about 60
    million Americans are exposed to mass-
    communicated news
•   Beware surveillance: when the
    news/information media warn the public
    about something. i.e. weather alerts,
    terrorism warnings, global warming
•   Instrumental surveillance: information that
    is useful in an everyday manner. e.g. stock
    prices, movie listings, “lifestyle” articles

*Not all types of surveillance come from the traditional news
    media. For example, HBO’s Sex and the City performed a
    surveillance function for fashions and designer footwear.
Consequences of relying on the media
       surveillance function
• With electronic media, news travels
  FAST
       It took months for the news of the end of the
       War of 1812 to travel across the Atlantic. In
       contrast, more than 90% of the U. S.
       population knew about the terrorist attacks of
       September 11, 2001, within 2 hours of the
       events.
• Sometimes speed leads to inaccuracy
       In 2011, NPR erroneously reported that
       Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords had died
       following a shooting incident in Tucson,
       Arizona.
• The media shows us more than we can
  personally verify
       Credibility is what makes news believable,
       reliable. According to the news, the Mars rover
       is collecting data. Can you personally verify
       this?
Dysfunctions of the media
• Media can cause panic
  and anxiety
    In 2004, many reports
    concluded bird flu would kill
    150 million people worldwide
    (this never happened)
• The media decides
  what/who “matters”
    status conferral: media
    attention raises prominence
Interpretation
• The mass media do not supply just
  facts and data, they also provide
  information on the ultimate
  meaning and significance of events
• Media gatekeepers decide what
  makes it into the
  newscast/newspaper/magazine
  and what doesn’t
• Editorials, TV news specials, cable
  news roundtable shows, reviews,
  political cartoons

       Consequences: many opinions are
       presented, there is no guarantee that
       opinions by experts are accurate and
       valid, people might let the media do their
       thinking for them
Linkage
• Mass media are able to join
  different elements of society
  that are not directly connected
       Advertising links the needs of buyers
       with the products of sellers
• When geographically separated
  groups share a common interest
  and are linked by the media.
       Example: Social Networking sites,
       eBay, Craigslist

   Consequences: In 2011 it was
   estimated that there were more than
   1,000 “hate” terrorist-related sites on
   the Internet; children bullying each
   other via social networks; pro-ana
   “thinspo” websites
Transmission of Values
• Also called the socialization function: the ways
  an individual comes to adopt the behavior and
  values of a group
• By watching the media, we learn how people
  are supposed to act and what values are
  important
• Consequences:
      •   Media stereotypes
              What do you think some of those are?
How does the media portray the American family over the years?
Mass media & social values
Sometimes, the media
consciously tries to instill
values and behavior in the
audience, and/or enforce
social norms
     •   newspapers reporting
         whether or not a car
         accident victim was
         wearing a seatbelt
     •   smoking on TV
     •   anti-drug ads
     •   Jonas Brothers purity
         pledge
Entertainment
• By 2011 more than 50 million
  people in the United States had seen
  Avatar at a theater.
• About 110 million people watched
  the 2011 Super Bowl on the Fox
  Network.
• The video game Call of Duty: Black
  Ops sold more than 5 million copies
  the first day it was on sale.

The emergence of mobile media and
  the internet have increased the
  entertainment function of the mass
  media
Consequences of the entertainment
           function
Consequences: entertainment that is carried
by the mass media must appeal to a mass
audience. As a result, media content is
designed to appeal to the lowest common
denominator of taste. More programs that
resemble Survivor and Jerry Springer will find
their way to TV than will opera performances.
•We are more apt to see sequels such as Star
Trek VIII than we are to see Much Ado About
Nothing II and More King Lear.
•Rock radio stations outnumber classical
stations 20 to 1.
•Critics have charged that the mass media will
turn Americans into a nation of watchers and
listeners instead of doers.
How people use the mass media
         (microanalysis)
Functional approach is a uses-and-gratifications
model, that states audiences have needs and desires
that are satisfied by media and non-media sources.
     Six category system:
     1.Cognition
     2.Diversion
     3.Social Utility
     4.Affiliation
     5.Expression
     6.Withdrawal
1. Cognition
The act of coming to KNOW
something
•Using the media to learn
something
•Example: current events,
news
•People use the media in a
cognitive way when they
want to understand the
world
2. Diversion
Using the media to take our attention
elsewhere. Three major forms of diversion:
1.Stimulation: seeking relief from boredom or
the routine activities of everyday life (I watch
TV because I am bored, this special on the
History Channel interests me)
2.Relaxation escape from the pressures and
problems of day- to- day existence (Had a
really stressful day at school, I relax by
watching Honey Boo Boo or reading TMZ) The
content is not the defining factor, since
virtually any media material might be used
for relaxation by some audience members.
3.Emotional release: Media consumption as
catharsis - a release of pent-up emotion or
energy. (horror movies, tearjerkers)
3. Social Utility
Social Utility describes the human need
to strengthen contact with family
members, friends, our entire social
group
•Conversational currency: using media as
common ground for connecting with
others
       Did you see The Avengers?
       What did you think of the Superbowl
       commercials?


•Parasocial relationship: the
phenomenon where people develop
(one-sided) relationships with media
characters.
       Example: fans of fictional characters, fans
       of a band, people who have favorite
       American Idol contestants, etc.
4. Affiliation
Affiliation refers to a person’s
desire to feel a sense of
belonging or involvement
within a social group
•The Internet is the primary
medium that fulfills this
function for many people.
     •   Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin
     •   Others include: online
         gaming, instant messaging,
         dating and matchmaking
         Web sites, and text
         messaging
5. Expression
Self-expression refers to individuals’ need to
express their inner thoughts, feelings, and
opinions.
•The first examples of the need for self-
expression are the cave drawings done by early
human beings
•Since that time, the need for self-expression has
been fulfilled primarily by creative and artistic
activities such as music, painting, writing, dance,
and sculpture
•The Internet has opened up new vistas for self-
expression
        •    Blogs, commenting on articles
        •    YouTube, Vimeo, SoundCloud
        •    Facebook pages can be personalized to express
             a person’s individuality
Expression is an important function for the
individual
6. Withdrawal
Withdrawal describes using the media to create
a barrier between themselves and other people
•“I’ll do that after I’m done watching my
show.”
       Here, attending to mass media content is defined as a
       socially appropriate behavior that should not be
       interrupted.
•People also use the media to create a buffer
zone between themselves and others.
       •When you are riding a bus or sitting in a public place
       and do not want to be disturbed, you bury your head
       in a book, magazine, or newspaper.
       •If you are on an airplane, you might pop in your iPod
       ear buds and tune everybody out.
       •Television can perform this same function at home by
       isolating adults from children (“ Don’t disturb Daddy;
       he’s watching the game”) or children from adults (“
       Don’t bother me now; go into the other room and
       watch Sesame Street ”).
Critical/cultural studies
The critical/cultural approach examines such concepts as ideology,
culture, politics, social structure, and hegemony as they relate to the
role of media in society

•Rooted in Marxism: the best way to understand how a society
worked was to examine who controlled the means of production
that met the basic needs of the population for food and shelter
•They noted that, just as big firms controlled the production of
economic goods, other big companies controlled the production of
cultural goods
•The Marxist perspective caused many to analyze the impact of the
media industries on the political and economic life of society and to
use interdisciplinary theories and methods in their investigations
Critical/cultural approach
Great Britain (late 1950s and early 1960s) Scholars at the Centre for
Contemporary Cultural Studies at Birmingham University noted that
members of the British working class used the products of mass
culture to define their own identities through the way they dressed,
the music they listened to, the hairstyles they favored, and so forth.

•The audience did not seem to be manipulated by the media, as the
Frankfurt School argued; instead, the relationship was more
complicated.
•Audience members took the products of mass culture, redefined
their meaning, and created new definitions of their self- image.
•This emphasis on meaning was reinforced by studies of film and
television.
Critical/cultural approach
• A theory developed by British film critics
  suggested that cinematic techniques (camera
  angle, editing, imagery) subtly but effectively
  impose on the audience the meanings preferred
  by the filmmaker.
• However, audience members were free to resist
  and come up with their own meanings.
     For example, although the dominant theme in a
     documentary about efforts to control pollution might be how
     hard industry is trying to control the problem, some in the
     audience might see the program as nothing more than an
     empty marketing gesture by big companies.
Critical/cultural approach
• Important to the cultural studies group were the
  values that were represented in the content.
• Marxists note that the values of the ruling class
  became the dominant values that were depicted
  in mass media and other cultural products.
• The dominant values that were represented were
  those of white, upper- class, Western males.
• The media worked to maintain those values by
  presenting versions of reality on TV and films that
  represented this situation as normal and natural,
  as the way things should be (cultural norms)
Critical/cultural approach
• This approach gained
  prominence in the United
  States during the 1970s and
  1980s, and was adopted by
  communication researchers
  and scholars engaged in
  feminist studies
• Examined the role of the
  patriarchy in media and
  cultural products
• How were women portrayed in
  the 1980s on TV and in film?
  How about now?
Critical/cultural approach
• The audience is not passive in
  this approach – they are free to
  reject or accept cultural norms
  encoded into cultural products
• Do you think audiences are
  passive or active?
• This approach also includes
  studying cultural myths
  embodied in mass
  communication
     Example: Star Trek relies on the telling
     of cultural myths of frontier expansion
     and exploration
Key concepts
Culture: is a complex concept that refers to the common values,
beliefs, social practices, rules, and assumptions that bind a group
of people together

Text: is simply the object of analysis. Texts are broadly defined:
They can be traditional media content such as TV programs,
films, ads, and books, or they can be things that do not fit into
the traditional category, such as shopping malls, T-shirts, dolls,
video games, and beaches.

Meaning: the interpretations that audience members take away
with them from the text. In fact, texts have many meanings; they
are polysemic. Different members of the audience will have
different interpretations of the same text.
Key concepts
Ideology: a specific set of ideas or
beliefs, particularly regarding
social and political subjects. Mass
communication messages and
other objects of popular culture
have ideology embedded in
them.

Hegemony: has to do with power
relationships and dominance. In
the United States, for example,
those who own the channels of
mass communication possess
cultural hegemony over the rest
of us. Maintains the “status quo.”
                                       How are gym teachers represented in our cultural products?

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Chapter 2: Perspectives on Mass Communication

  • 1. Chapter 2 Perspectives on Mass Communication
  • 2. Key terms Paradigm: a model or pattern that a person uses to analyze something 1. Functional approach: emphasizes the way that audiences use mass communication and the benefits that people receive from media consumption 2. Critical/cultural approach: examines the underlying power relationships in media exposure and stresses the many meanings and interpretations that the audience members find in media content 3. Empirical approach: uses the techniques of the social sciences, such as experiments and surveys, to investigate the cognitive, attitudinal, and behavioral effects of mass communication* *the empirical approach is covered later on in the semester. We will only be discussing the functional and critical/cultural approach in this chapter
  • 3. Why use a paradigm? 1. It provides us with a consistent perspective from which to examine mass communication 2. It generates concepts that are helpful in understanding media behavior 3. It helps us identify what is or is not important in the process
  • 4. Example: The Apprentice The functional approach would ask why people watch this show. What about the show appeals to men, or women? Does the audience learn anything? Do people like to play along? Do they talk about the show with their friends? The critical/cultural approach would investigate the role editing and casting plays in creating a reality experience, how does the show portray capitalism? Does it suggest wealth is an important value? Does it glorify competition over cooperation?
  • 5. Functional analysis Asks, “why?” •Why do you watch TV? •Why do you go to the movies? •Why do you use Facebook?
  • 6. Mass communication in society • Mass media is pervasive • Different people use different media for different purposes • Society requires communication • Function/dysfunction Two types of analyses: 1. Macroanalysis: take the perspective of a sociologist and look through a wide- angle lens to consider the functions performed by the mass media for the entire society 2. Microanalysis: look through a close- up lens at the individual receivers of the content, the audience, and ask them to report on how they use mass media
  • 7. Functions of Mass Communication for Society • Surveillance: the news and information role of the media*. The media as sentinels and lookouts. On any given day, about 60 million Americans are exposed to mass- communicated news • Beware surveillance: when the news/information media warn the public about something. i.e. weather alerts, terrorism warnings, global warming • Instrumental surveillance: information that is useful in an everyday manner. e.g. stock prices, movie listings, “lifestyle” articles *Not all types of surveillance come from the traditional news media. For example, HBO’s Sex and the City performed a surveillance function for fashions and designer footwear.
  • 8. Consequences of relying on the media surveillance function • With electronic media, news travels FAST It took months for the news of the end of the War of 1812 to travel across the Atlantic. In contrast, more than 90% of the U. S. population knew about the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, within 2 hours of the events. • Sometimes speed leads to inaccuracy In 2011, NPR erroneously reported that Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords had died following a shooting incident in Tucson, Arizona. • The media shows us more than we can personally verify Credibility is what makes news believable, reliable. According to the news, the Mars rover is collecting data. Can you personally verify this?
  • 9. Dysfunctions of the media • Media can cause panic and anxiety In 2004, many reports concluded bird flu would kill 150 million people worldwide (this never happened) • The media decides what/who “matters” status conferral: media attention raises prominence
  • 10. Interpretation • The mass media do not supply just facts and data, they also provide information on the ultimate meaning and significance of events • Media gatekeepers decide what makes it into the newscast/newspaper/magazine and what doesn’t • Editorials, TV news specials, cable news roundtable shows, reviews, political cartoons Consequences: many opinions are presented, there is no guarantee that opinions by experts are accurate and valid, people might let the media do their thinking for them
  • 11. Linkage • Mass media are able to join different elements of society that are not directly connected Advertising links the needs of buyers with the products of sellers • When geographically separated groups share a common interest and are linked by the media. Example: Social Networking sites, eBay, Craigslist Consequences: In 2011 it was estimated that there were more than 1,000 “hate” terrorist-related sites on the Internet; children bullying each other via social networks; pro-ana “thinspo” websites
  • 12. Transmission of Values • Also called the socialization function: the ways an individual comes to adopt the behavior and values of a group • By watching the media, we learn how people are supposed to act and what values are important • Consequences: • Media stereotypes What do you think some of those are? How does the media portray the American family over the years?
  • 13. Mass media & social values Sometimes, the media consciously tries to instill values and behavior in the audience, and/or enforce social norms • newspapers reporting whether or not a car accident victim was wearing a seatbelt • smoking on TV • anti-drug ads • Jonas Brothers purity pledge
  • 14. Entertainment • By 2011 more than 50 million people in the United States had seen Avatar at a theater. • About 110 million people watched the 2011 Super Bowl on the Fox Network. • The video game Call of Duty: Black Ops sold more than 5 million copies the first day it was on sale. The emergence of mobile media and the internet have increased the entertainment function of the mass media
  • 15. Consequences of the entertainment function Consequences: entertainment that is carried by the mass media must appeal to a mass audience. As a result, media content is designed to appeal to the lowest common denominator of taste. More programs that resemble Survivor and Jerry Springer will find their way to TV than will opera performances. •We are more apt to see sequels such as Star Trek VIII than we are to see Much Ado About Nothing II and More King Lear. •Rock radio stations outnumber classical stations 20 to 1. •Critics have charged that the mass media will turn Americans into a nation of watchers and listeners instead of doers.
  • 16. How people use the mass media (microanalysis) Functional approach is a uses-and-gratifications model, that states audiences have needs and desires that are satisfied by media and non-media sources. Six category system: 1.Cognition 2.Diversion 3.Social Utility 4.Affiliation 5.Expression 6.Withdrawal
  • 17. 1. Cognition The act of coming to KNOW something •Using the media to learn something •Example: current events, news •People use the media in a cognitive way when they want to understand the world
  • 18. 2. Diversion Using the media to take our attention elsewhere. Three major forms of diversion: 1.Stimulation: seeking relief from boredom or the routine activities of everyday life (I watch TV because I am bored, this special on the History Channel interests me) 2.Relaxation escape from the pressures and problems of day- to- day existence (Had a really stressful day at school, I relax by watching Honey Boo Boo or reading TMZ) The content is not the defining factor, since virtually any media material might be used for relaxation by some audience members. 3.Emotional release: Media consumption as catharsis - a release of pent-up emotion or energy. (horror movies, tearjerkers)
  • 19. 3. Social Utility Social Utility describes the human need to strengthen contact with family members, friends, our entire social group •Conversational currency: using media as common ground for connecting with others Did you see The Avengers? What did you think of the Superbowl commercials? •Parasocial relationship: the phenomenon where people develop (one-sided) relationships with media characters. Example: fans of fictional characters, fans of a band, people who have favorite American Idol contestants, etc.
  • 20. 4. Affiliation Affiliation refers to a person’s desire to feel a sense of belonging or involvement within a social group •The Internet is the primary medium that fulfills this function for many people. • Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin • Others include: online gaming, instant messaging, dating and matchmaking Web sites, and text messaging
  • 21. 5. Expression Self-expression refers to individuals’ need to express their inner thoughts, feelings, and opinions. •The first examples of the need for self- expression are the cave drawings done by early human beings •Since that time, the need for self-expression has been fulfilled primarily by creative and artistic activities such as music, painting, writing, dance, and sculpture •The Internet has opened up new vistas for self- expression • Blogs, commenting on articles • YouTube, Vimeo, SoundCloud • Facebook pages can be personalized to express a person’s individuality Expression is an important function for the individual
  • 22. 6. Withdrawal Withdrawal describes using the media to create a barrier between themselves and other people •“I’ll do that after I’m done watching my show.” Here, attending to mass media content is defined as a socially appropriate behavior that should not be interrupted. •People also use the media to create a buffer zone between themselves and others. •When you are riding a bus or sitting in a public place and do not want to be disturbed, you bury your head in a book, magazine, or newspaper. •If you are on an airplane, you might pop in your iPod ear buds and tune everybody out. •Television can perform this same function at home by isolating adults from children (“ Don’t disturb Daddy; he’s watching the game”) or children from adults (“ Don’t bother me now; go into the other room and watch Sesame Street ”).
  • 23. Critical/cultural studies The critical/cultural approach examines such concepts as ideology, culture, politics, social structure, and hegemony as they relate to the role of media in society •Rooted in Marxism: the best way to understand how a society worked was to examine who controlled the means of production that met the basic needs of the population for food and shelter •They noted that, just as big firms controlled the production of economic goods, other big companies controlled the production of cultural goods •The Marxist perspective caused many to analyze the impact of the media industries on the political and economic life of society and to use interdisciplinary theories and methods in their investigations
  • 24. Critical/cultural approach Great Britain (late 1950s and early 1960s) Scholars at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies at Birmingham University noted that members of the British working class used the products of mass culture to define their own identities through the way they dressed, the music they listened to, the hairstyles they favored, and so forth. •The audience did not seem to be manipulated by the media, as the Frankfurt School argued; instead, the relationship was more complicated. •Audience members took the products of mass culture, redefined their meaning, and created new definitions of their self- image. •This emphasis on meaning was reinforced by studies of film and television.
  • 25. Critical/cultural approach • A theory developed by British film critics suggested that cinematic techniques (camera angle, editing, imagery) subtly but effectively impose on the audience the meanings preferred by the filmmaker. • However, audience members were free to resist and come up with their own meanings. For example, although the dominant theme in a documentary about efforts to control pollution might be how hard industry is trying to control the problem, some in the audience might see the program as nothing more than an empty marketing gesture by big companies.
  • 26. Critical/cultural approach • Important to the cultural studies group were the values that were represented in the content. • Marxists note that the values of the ruling class became the dominant values that were depicted in mass media and other cultural products. • The dominant values that were represented were those of white, upper- class, Western males. • The media worked to maintain those values by presenting versions of reality on TV and films that represented this situation as normal and natural, as the way things should be (cultural norms)
  • 27. Critical/cultural approach • This approach gained prominence in the United States during the 1970s and 1980s, and was adopted by communication researchers and scholars engaged in feminist studies • Examined the role of the patriarchy in media and cultural products • How were women portrayed in the 1980s on TV and in film? How about now?
  • 28. Critical/cultural approach • The audience is not passive in this approach – they are free to reject or accept cultural norms encoded into cultural products • Do you think audiences are passive or active? • This approach also includes studying cultural myths embodied in mass communication Example: Star Trek relies on the telling of cultural myths of frontier expansion and exploration
  • 29. Key concepts Culture: is a complex concept that refers to the common values, beliefs, social practices, rules, and assumptions that bind a group of people together Text: is simply the object of analysis. Texts are broadly defined: They can be traditional media content such as TV programs, films, ads, and books, or they can be things that do not fit into the traditional category, such as shopping malls, T-shirts, dolls, video games, and beaches. Meaning: the interpretations that audience members take away with them from the text. In fact, texts have many meanings; they are polysemic. Different members of the audience will have different interpretations of the same text.
  • 30. Key concepts Ideology: a specific set of ideas or beliefs, particularly regarding social and political subjects. Mass communication messages and other objects of popular culture have ideology embedded in them. Hegemony: has to do with power relationships and dominance. In the United States, for example, those who own the channels of mass communication possess cultural hegemony over the rest of us. Maintains the “status quo.” How are gym teachers represented in our cultural products?