SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  92
Media Theory toolkit
(1) Texts & Literacies
(2) Concepts & Debates
Right here, right now
Disclaimer / Mediation
The plan:
•The point of it all and the what and the how;
•Texts and literacies – key concepts
•Still image analysis
•Moving image analysis
(breaks as and when)
Spot of lunch downstairs
•Debates and perspectives:
•Audiences, effects, reception
•Power, democracy, ideology
•Media 2.0 and ‘We Media’
•Postmodernism
(breaks as and when)
Recommended
Using …
90 slides with many links
Lots of images, moving images and sounds
Some modelled learning plans
Some Key Readings
Lots of Charlie Brooker
Some Zizek
Texts and Meaning
Reception
Genre, Narrative, Representation
Democracy
Effects
Regulation v Responsibilities
Futures and utopia / dystopia
Funding, access and citizenship
Global Culture
Identities
Mickey Mouse?
Understanding Media by Marshall McLuhan,
Television by Raymond Williams
Mythologies by Roland Barthes
Simulacra and Simulation by Jean Baudrillard
The Image by Daniel Boorstin
Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman
Dialectic of Enlightenment by Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno
Manufacturing Consent by Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky
No Sense of Place by Joshua Meyrowitz
Television Culture by John Fiske
NB - The notable name missing is Stuart Hall, who sadly never authored a 'text' as such
(only edited them), but clearly warrants a place in a list of important media thinkers.
‘Laughey’s Canon’
Sociocultural literacy (Bhabha and
Gutierrez’s conceptions)
Curriculum and power (Yandell)
Cultural capital (Bourdieu)
Funds of knowledge (Bourdieu,
Marsh, Moll but also Parry et al)
Semi permeable membrane
(Potter, McDougall & Potter)
The “Third Space” of learning
THEORY / PRACTICE / PRAXIS
Doing Text / Being Text
Texts: Transmedia
• Doctor Who has encompassed television, radio, literature, cinema and
videogames, across 50 years.
• All adds up to a rich metatext, with multiple access points –
although television is clearly the dominant medium.
Key Concepts: Genre | Narrative
Representation
Key Reading: Laura Mulvey
That the more restricted forms
of textual engagement that
English offers remain at the
core of the National Curriculum
and that English retains a
relatively elevated academic
status are testament to the
strange but powerful grip of
an educational order that has
been and remains difficult to
shake off.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3W99TKSwIMk
The so-called ‘long revolution’ has indeed been ‘long’ as
the young people say.
We don’t know if the happy playground of Media Studies might in the very
long run have some serious impact on the established academic order and
might seriously challenge what Derrida has called the ‘violence’ that attends
‘the legitimization of canons’. Nick Peim, Preface to Doing Text.
Key Concepts: Representation
Image Literacy | Semiotics
From Saussure and Barthes.From Saussure and Barthes.
Signs.Signs.
Symbols.Symbols.
Myth.Myth.
Micro to macro.Micro to macro.
Polysemy and fluidity at level ofPolysemy and fluidity at level of
connotationconnotation
Mythology
Moving Image Literacy
Camera Helps to Deliver Meaning
• Shot Types – what meanings do a long shot and a
Point of View (POV) shot help deliver?
- Long shot – establishing shot, shows the viewer where they are in the
scene. POV –feel as though you are part of the scene
Shot Types Helps to Situate the Viewer
• Angle – (high angle POV shot = superiority, low angle POV shot =
weakness)
• Movement - Zoom can highlight emotion on a character, Jerky hand
held POV shot can provide tension and involvement in action sequences
(e.g. Cloverfield)
• Focus / Detail – Used to highlight important elements to the
narrative / storyline
Editing Helps to Deliver Meaning
• Manipulation of Time / Space – flashbacks, Jump Cuts,
Cross Cuts, etc
• Rhythm and Pace – Fast paced / frequent cuts = action,
slow paced / infrequent cuts = drama
/ romance
• Persuasion – Edit tries to influence your view of the events
• Ellipsis – When parts of the story (narrative) are edited out
(can be explicit and implicit)
• Dialectical montage (Eisenstein) – 2 different shots put
together to construct meaning
Sound | Image Helps to Deliver Meaning
• Provides Anchorage (Romantic music + 2 people staring into
each others eyes tells you that you are watching a romantic scene)
• Contrast or Flow (can provide an indication as to whether the
direction of a movie is changing or staying the same)
• Diegetic Sound (sound that originates from within the movie
narrative – e.g. the sound of a CD playing when an actor presses
play.)
• Non-diegetic sound (sound that is not part of the narrative – e.g.
background music)
Contributes to Mise en SceneContributes to Mise en Scene
Mise en scene helps to deliver meaning
•Refers to the overall Atmosphere / Ambience of a scene
•What contributes to mise en scene?
- Costume
- Lighting
- Props
- Sound
- Actors
•Moving image = still images moving (Semiotics can be applied to help explain
meaning)
•Versisimilitude?
- Where the scene provides a sense of realism (2 types:- Generic = realistic
for the type of genre, Cultural = realistic because it mimics real life)
Micro to Macro
• What are Micro elements?
– individual elements (such as camera angles, editing, sound,
elements of mise en scene) Elements can be diegetic and
non-diegetic.
• What is Macro?
What meaning the individual elements amount to
• But always remember THE ACTIVE AUDIENCE MAKESTHE ACTIVE AUDIENCE MAKES
THE MEANINGTHE MEANING (based on cultural experiences and literacy).
There may be many ways a film can be interpreted
(PolsyemyPolsyemy)
Decoding: Bound up in identity
Your examples of curation?
Putting texts to work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwsQ_5Wm4oo
Media Theory Toolkit:
(2) Concepts and Perspectives
@JulianMcDougall
Theories of Culture
Adorno: ‘Culture industry reconsidered’in
New German Critique, 6, Fall 1975, 12-19
Hesmondalgh: ‘Creative and Cultural Industries’ in
Bennett, (2008): The Sage Handbook of Cultural
Analysis 552–569
The Culture Industry or Cultural Industries?
Adorno – standardisation (of cultural products and consumers)
•Popular music (and jazz) – mass consumption, formula, subjugation
•THE culture industry = monolothic, standardised
•Political economy account – sets up mass production against the
creative (high) artist.
Hesmondalgh – plural cultural industries
•Symbolic creators – degrees of creative autonomy, complexity and
difference
•Socio-cultural account – looks at structure / agency dynamics
•Compares creative workers’ levels of freedom to other industries
•Emphasises “contested ground’ upon which different kinds of cultural
texts are produced” (Laughey, 2007: 126)
Culture | Industry
Adorno: ‘mass culture’ is structural: The cultural commodities of
the industry are governed, as value, and not by their own specific
content and harmonious formation. Anti-enlightenment
Only their deep unconscious mistrust, the last residue of the difference between art and empirical
reality in the spiritual make-up of the masses explains why they have not, to a person, long since
perceived and accepted the world as it is constructed for them by the culture industry.
Hesmondhalgh: ‘Cultural Industries’ = an attempt to pluralize
Adorno’s flawed theory. Emphasis on contradiction and complexity
in neo-liberal context.
Those who prefer the term ‘cultural industries’ tend to be much more sober in their claims regarding the role of
culture or creativity in modern economies and societies, and, as we shall see, considerably more sceptical about
the benefits of marketization in the domain of culture, than what we might call the creativity or creative
industries theorists.
Work
Adorno: transformations in the industrial production of art
(Frankfurt School neo-Marxist tradition – along with
Benjamin’s ‘mechanical reproduction’).
Hesmondalgh: creative labour as “communication of experience
through symbolic reproduction” (from Raymond Williams’ ‘Long
Revolution’).
Key ideas: autonomy (workplace + creative), self-realisation,
divisions of labour.
Culture Industry, Creative Industry, Creative Work
Mass media central to consumer economy since 1950s.
Internet, social media and inter-active media – paradigm shift?
Lopez (2012) – 4 elements to neo-liberal hegemony of culture:
•Privatisation
•Commodification
•Crisis for control
•Enclosure of creative commons – by corporations.
Autonomy of the creative worker:
Policies that argue for a radical expansion of these industries under present conditions,
without attention to the conditions of creative labour, risk fuelling labour markets marked by
irregular, insecure and unprotected work. (Hesmondalgh)
Sociological focus in STRUCTURE and AGENCY (Bourdieu, Giddens).
Discussion
• Creative Labour
• Authenticity
• Autonomy
• Culture
• INDUSTRIES – Art, Film, Museum, Graffiti
Group 1 - What would Adorno say?
Group 2 - Apply Hesmondalgh?
Discuss
Complex
Audience, Effects, Reception
Although we might think of media habits as mundane and idiosyncratic, the fact
that we all have them shows structural forces afoot. (Ruddock: 77)
Models of Mass Media
‘Classic’ (outdated or timeless?) models:
• Shannon and Weaver, 1949
• Galtung and Ruge, 1965
• Blumer and Katz,1974
Ideology and Interpellation
Key example = gender based magazines
Nuts does four things:
1. Represents men to men.
2. Represents men to women.
3. Represents women to men.
4. Represents women to women.
Men’s magazine covers = women
Women’s magazine covers = women
Why?
Complicity
Key Reading:
Althusser: Interpellation
(misrecognition)
Winship: complicity and
(false) belonging
Gauntlett – irony / play
Feminism (Butler)
Gender is not natural, it is learned and
PERFORMED
Playful renegotiation of gender = gender
trouble (a subversive act)
Madonna, Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift
Grayson Perry
See Gauntlett – Media, Gender, Identity
Moral Panics
Cohen, S, 1972.
Key Reading: Charles Krinsky
The Other
Murder of James Bulger by two boys
Shocked public reaction
Trial: search for blame
Father’s videoshop membership info
CP3 picked on by press
Spurious links with narrative offered
Recent panics
Videogames
Online activity
Campus killings / knife and gun crime / gangs and Youtube
Texting, internet and literacy
Electronic media and obesity
Screen / web addiction
Social skills in decline due to internet
Identity: British Social Realism
National Identity?
Films do not present a neutral, transparent view of reality, but offer
instead a mediated re-presentation of it.
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
Key Reading: Paul Gilroy
Text-Case 1
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
Text-Case 2
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
Text-Case 3
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4G_UYK0Rkk
Text-Case 4
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
Text-Case 5
Types of Realism
Discourses
Ideology
Othering
Plural readings
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4KbJLpu7yo
Postcolonial power
Laughing at oneself is an
extension of the subjective
positioning of the colonized that
– internalization of inferiority.
But other examples of resistance
– women on screen in hybrid
game shows.
Ownership and Media Power
A Marxist view of media will focus
on the relationship between the
providers of media, broader power
structures and the messages in
media products circulated by these
power-holding institutions.
This is media hegemony /
ideology theory.
Marxist ideology theory presents the
media as a controlling force.
Effects theories tend to assume a
passive audience.
Reception theory sees audiences as
active makers of meaning.
Audiences may read the media as the
producers intended (preferred reading
- hegemonic).
They may partly share the preferred
response (negotiated reading)
They may interpret the text in an
alternative way (oppositional, counter-
hegemonic reading).
But ideology doesn’t go away. Ask
Zizek.
We Media | The Empire Strikes Back
The benchmark
Bold claims
Media Ideology – Chomsky
it’s complicated
Media Theory Toolkit:
Media 2.0?
@JulianMcDougall
Modalities
Media 2.0
Lots of DIFFERENT IDEAS on this.
Very much a CONTESTED view.
Merrin | Gauntlett
Media 1.0
• Celebrates key texts produced by media moguls and celebrated by well-known
critics
• Vague recognition of internet and new digital media, as an 'add on' to the
traditional media
• A preference for conventional ideas where most people are treated as non-expert
audience 'receivers', or, if they are part of the formal media industries, as expert
'producers'.
Merrin | Gauntlett
Media 2.0
• Interest in the massive 'long tail' of independent media projects such as those
found on YouTube and many other websites, mobile devices, and other forms of
DIY media
Recognition that internet and digital media have fundamentally changed the ways
in which we engage with all media
• Media now more democratic through people making and connecting
So – for Media Studies: WHAT COUNTS?
RELATIVISM?
New frameworks?
).
Apply new framework to:
Lego Movie
Talking dog
Fake JL ad
Your two choices of media 2.0 viral
Merrin (2014)
Mass media and computing converged at the end of the 20th century with
material, ecological, cultural and personal transformations.
What are these, for you?
Media Studies is a product of the analogue, broadcast era, emerging in the early 20th century as a
response to the success of newspapers, radio and cinema and reflecting that era back in its
organisation, themes and concepts.
Does it seem this way to you? If so, how? If not, why not?
Digitalisation takes us beyond this analogue era (media studies 1.0) into a new, post-broadcast era.
This era demands an upgraded academic discipline: one reflecting the real media life of its students
and teaching the key skills needed by the 21st-century user. Media 2.0 demand a media studies 2.0.
What do you think this would look like?
If digital media are the result of the meeting and merger of computing and mass media then we need
to teach our students computing to enable them to produce software and products for themselves.
One thing at least is certain: filling students’ time by teaching them how to use a video camera or
making them pretend to be a newsreader in a fake studio is a waste of their fees and an inadequate
training for the 21st century.
What about your fees, then?
Merrin (2014)
Print, radio, cinema and television have been transformed in their
material basis, ecological position and relationships, cultural production,
distribution and consumption and their individual use. Each medium has had to
Realign itself to meet the demands of a different era and different market
conditions, changing their economic models, content creation, modes of
distribution, relationship with other forms and even their own idea of what they are doing and how their forms will
be used. Apply to television - discuss.
Whilst media studies 2.0 privileges digital media as a revolutionary force in consuming older forms and practices
and creating new modes of media experience, it isn’t an uncritical celebration of these forms or these modes.
McLuhan commented how ‘ many people seem to think that if you talk about something recent, you’re in favour
of it’ and discussions of digital media attract the same reaction.
Manovich already argued in The Language of New Media (2001) that ‘ new media calls for a new stage in
media theory’ , suggesting that ‘ to understand the logic of new media, we need to turn to computer science. It is
there that we may expect to find the new terms, categories and operations that characterise media that became
programmable.’ Computing can serve as a key research tool for the digital environment, with data visualisation
software allowing the analysis of large collections of information.
In order to be able to write media today our students need to know how to produce software, how to employ or
create digital tools and platforms, and how to navigate and use the digital ecology. ‘ Media practice’, therefore,
needs to be reorientated towards training students in computing and the digital ecology. Today’ s user needs up-
to-date, practical knowledge of how to best take advantage of digital technologies and, like the hacker, how to
secure their communications, anonymise or hide their activities and delete and control their digital footprint.
These may well be the most important ‘ practice’ skills of the 21st century.
How are we doing here?
Imagine
OK, but
Unthinkable now ….
Morozov
• View that the web is emancipatory is a “mis-reading of history”
• Part of the technologically deterministic, cyber-utopian “Google
Doctrine” or “Twitter Agenda”, ie a mirror image of a moral
panic…
• Governments are actually using the
web for propaganda, control,
surveillance, censorship and
suppression
• Big Data - an algorithmic panopticon?
Present Shock?
Alvin Toffler’s radical 1970 book, Future Shock, theorized that things were
changing so fast we would soon lose the ability to cope. Rushkoff argues
that the future is now and we’re contending with a fundamentally new
challenge. Whereas Toffler said we were disoriented by a future that was
careening toward us, Rushkoff argues that we no longer have a sense of a
future, of goals, of direction at all. We have a completely new relationship
to time; we live in an always-on “now,” where the priorities of this
moment seem to be everything.
Wall Street traders no longer invest in a future; they expect profits off their
algorithmic trades themselves, in the ultra-fast moment. Voters want immediate
results from their politicians, having lost all sense of the historic timescale on
which government functions. Kids txt during parties to find out if there’s
something better happening in the moment, somewhere else.
Douglas Rushkoff
• Many scholars very much against the media 2.0 hypothesis
• It is very cynical about theory, but does draw heavily from theorists such
as Bourdieu and McLuhan
• Celebrates the “power of active users” , ignoring the commercial
structures that help to shape those powers
• Ignores real material and cultural constraints?
– Gender inequality?
– Poverty?
– Who’s online?
Back to …. The story of text
Radical democracy or not, something is happening to
text ‘after the media’ …
Games and Media Concepts
1.0
Genre
Narrative
Representation
Audience
Effects
2.0
Ludology
Play
Flow
Immersion
Identity
Key Reading; Frasca
Reading Games as
(Authorless) Literature
FLATTENED TEXTUALITY
Key reading: Videogames as (authorless literature)
The Postmodern: Baudrillard’s hyper-real?
neither dream nor reality but simulacrum –
fetishised reality
Virtual reality = product
deprived of its substance.
“Just as decaffeinated coffee
smells and tastes like real
coffee without being real
coffee,Virtual reality is
experienced as reality without
being so.What happens at the
end of this process of
virtualization, however, is that
we begin to experience ‘real
reality’ itself as a virtual
entity”.
(2002:231)
Thanks for coming!
More stuff in Dropbox …
Slides with links
Learning plans
Links to resources / further reading
julian@cemp.ac.uk

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Key media concept
Key media conceptKey media concept
Key media conceptElliottChyi
 
Theories
TheoriesTheories
Theorieshanaa_m
 
Culture industry for superior
Culture industry for superiorCulture industry for superior
Culture industry for superiorgtvboss
 
Introduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureIntroduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureDeborahJ
 
G3251bmediarepresentation
G3251bmediarepresentationG3251bmediarepresentation
G3251bmediarepresentationctrmedia
 
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planning
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planningModernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planning
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planningNony Gupta
 
Postmodern Identities
Postmodern IdentitiesPostmodern Identities
Postmodern IdentitiesClive McGoun
 
Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Clive McGoun
 
The culture industry
The culture industryThe culture industry
The culture industrymsesoman
 
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtBeyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtDeborahJ
 

Tendances (16)

Key media concept
Key media conceptKey media concept
Key media concept
 
Theories
TheoriesTheories
Theories
 
Culture industry for superior
Culture industry for superiorCulture industry for superior
Culture industry for superior
 
Introduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureIntroduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual Culture
 
G3251bmediarepresentation
G3251bmediarepresentationG3251bmediarepresentation
G3251bmediarepresentation
 
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planning
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planningModernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planning
Modernity and postmodernity in urban and rural planning
 
Postmodernism for Beginners
Postmodernism for BeginnersPostmodernism for Beginners
Postmodernism for Beginners
 
Postmodern Identities
Postmodern IdentitiesPostmodern Identities
Postmodern Identities
 
Popular culture
Popular culturePopular culture
Popular culture
 
Culture industry
Culture industryCulture industry
Culture industry
 
Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06
 
The culture industry
The culture industryThe culture industry
The culture industry
 
Socio101 report pres
Socio101 report presSocio101 report pres
Socio101 report pres
 
The Frames
The FramesThe Frames
The Frames
 
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtBeyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
 
Modernity
ModernityModernity
Modernity
 

En vedette

Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative Genre
Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative GenreMedia Theory - Audience Representation Narrative Genre
Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative GenreMissMoore866
 
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2MissOzzy
 
Media Theories.
Media Theories.Media Theories.
Media Theories.Geoff Moss
 
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspectivesciencecharter
 
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation final
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation finalDmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation final
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation finalSu Little
 
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12Dave Truss
 
design education. empowerment. transformation
design education. empowerment. transformationdesign education. empowerment. transformation
design education. empowerment. transformationCynthia Lawson Jaramillo
 
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum sciencecharter
 
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...Marcus Leaning
 
The True Value of Social Media
The True Value of Social MediaThe True Value of Social Media
The True Value of Social MediaBrandon Murphy
 
Social Media - from theory to praxis
Social Media - from theory to praxisSocial Media - from theory to praxis
Social Media - from theory to praxisStefanos Karagos
 
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-gdsteacher
 
Social.media 201 - alumni senate 2010
Social.media 201  - alumni senate 2010Social.media 201  - alumni senate 2010
Social.media 201 - alumni senate 2010Josh Stowe
 
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatie
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatieSurf's Up! KennisLAB publicatie
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatieKennisLAB
 
100624 tube 1 surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)
100624 tube 1   surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)100624 tube 1   surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)
100624 tube 1 surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)KennisLAB
 
Career Development Team September 26
Career Development Team September 26Career Development Team September 26
Career Development Team September 26V
 

En vedette (20)

Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative Genre
Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative GenreMedia Theory - Audience Representation Narrative Genre
Media Theory - Audience Representation Narrative Genre
 
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2
Theory and Theorist For Media Studies A2
 
Media Theories.
Media Theories.Media Theories.
Media Theories.
 
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective
21st Century Science Education - A Teacher's Perspective
 
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation final
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation finalDmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation final
Dmma knowledge network education and transformation presentation final
 
Education transformation framework
Education transformation frameworkEducation transformation framework
Education transformation framework
 
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12
Shifting Education - Embracing the Transformation #OTRK12
 
design education. empowerment. transformation
design education. empowerment. transformationdesign education. empowerment. transformation
design education. empowerment. transformation
 
Theories
TheoriesTheories
Theories
 
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum
Update on Education Transformation and the Science Curriculum
 
Media Theory
Media TheoryMedia Theory
Media Theory
 
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...
Exploring Media Theory Lecture 2 Political and Economic Marxist Approach to t...
 
The True Value of Social Media
The True Value of Social MediaThe True Value of Social Media
The True Value of Social Media
 
Social Media - from theory to praxis
Social Media - from theory to praxisSocial Media - from theory to praxis
Social Media - from theory to praxis
 
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-
G325 a media theory and theorists_sectiona-
 
Big data: de mogelijkheden en de moeilijkheden
Big data: de mogelijkheden en de moeilijkhedenBig data: de mogelijkheden en de moeilijkheden
Big data: de mogelijkheden en de moeilijkheden
 
Social.media 201 - alumni senate 2010
Social.media 201  - alumni senate 2010Social.media 201  - alumni senate 2010
Social.media 201 - alumni senate 2010
 
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatie
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatieSurf's Up! KennisLAB publicatie
Surf's Up! KennisLAB publicatie
 
100624 tube 1 surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)
100624 tube 1   surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)100624 tube 1   surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)
100624 tube 1 surf me a letter (jan van dommelen)
 
Career Development Team September 26
Career Development Team September 26Career Development Team September 26
Career Development Team September 26
 

Similaire à Media Theory Toolkit 2016

Social Implications
Social Implications Social Implications
Social Implications wmorris
 
Genre Theory
Genre Theory Genre Theory
Genre Theory 04kelfos
 
Modernism v postmodernism
Modernism v postmodernismModernism v postmodernism
Modernism v postmodernismellyshakular
 
1. Collective I.D. lessons
1. Collective I.D. lessons1. Collective I.D. lessons
1. Collective I.D. lessonsBelinda Raji
 
Using conventions from real media text.
Using conventions from real media text.Using conventions from real media text.
Using conventions from real media text.Angela Pearson
 
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examA level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examMrSouthworth
 
Narrative a2(1b)
Narrative a2(1b)Narrative a2(1b)
Narrative a2(1b)Jenna9
 
A level media overview
A level media overviewA level media overview
A level media overviewEthan Felton
 
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1Department of English MKBU
 
Theoretical research
Theoretical researchTheoretical research
Theoretical researchChloeMateides
 
Question 1 b – key concepts and theories
Question 1 b – key concepts and theoriesQuestion 1 b – key concepts and theories
Question 1 b – key concepts and theoriesosnapitsalina
 
Media representation theory
Media representation theoryMedia representation theory
Media representation theoryThomas Griffiths
 
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptxJamesDixon10403
 

Similaire à Media Theory Toolkit 2016 (20)

Mc1 Week 2 09
Mc1 Week 2 09Mc1 Week 2 09
Mc1 Week 2 09
 
Social Implications
Social Implications Social Implications
Social Implications
 
Genre Theory
Genre Theory Genre Theory
Genre Theory
 
Modernism v postmodernism
Modernism v postmodernismModernism v postmodernism
Modernism v postmodernism
 
1. Collective I.D. lessons
1. Collective I.D. lessons1. Collective I.D. lessons
1. Collective I.D. lessons
 
Using conventions from real media text.
Using conventions from real media text.Using conventions from real media text.
Using conventions from real media text.
 
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examA level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
 
Collective Id Ocr 2010
Collective Id Ocr 2010Collective Id Ocr 2010
Collective Id Ocr 2010
 
Key media concepts
Key media conceptsKey media concepts
Key media concepts
 
Narrative a2(1b)
Narrative a2(1b)Narrative a2(1b)
Narrative a2(1b)
 
A level media overview
A level media overviewA level media overview
A level media overview
 
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1
Cultural Studies areas, Terms and Theorists Part 1
 
Theoretical research
Theoretical researchTheoretical research
Theoretical research
 
Question 1 b – key concepts and theories
Question 1 b – key concepts and theoriesQuestion 1 b – key concepts and theories
Question 1 b – key concepts and theories
 
Media representation theory
Media representation theoryMedia representation theory
Media representation theory
 
Genre theory
Genre theoryGenre theory
Genre theory
 
Development of Media Technologies
Development of Media TechnologiesDevelopment of Media Technologies
Development of Media Technologies
 
Genre theory details
Genre theory detailsGenre theory details
Genre theory details
 
Genre theory details
Genre theory detailsGenre theory details
Genre theory details
 
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
 

Plus de Julian McDougall

Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology
Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology
Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology Julian McDougall
 
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentation
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentationSalzburg Academy: Julian's presentation
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentationJulian McDougall
 
Media 2.0 v After the Media
Media 2.0 v After the Media Media 2.0 v After the Media
Media 2.0 v After the Media Julian McDougall
 
G325 overview Oakmead 2014
G325 overview  Oakmead 2014 G325 overview  Oakmead 2014
G325 overview Oakmead 2014 Julian McDougall
 
Media workplace research methods
Media workplace research methods Media workplace research methods
Media workplace research methods Julian McDougall
 

Plus de Julian McDougall (6)

Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology
Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology
Mapping media literacy to media education: a transferable methodology
 
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentation
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentationSalzburg Academy: Julian's presentation
Salzburg Academy: Julian's presentation
 
Media 2.0 v After the Media
Media 2.0 v After the Media Media 2.0 v After the Media
Media 2.0 v After the Media
 
G325 overview Oakmead 2014
G325 overview  Oakmead 2014 G325 overview  Oakmead 2014
G325 overview Oakmead 2014
 
Media workplace research methods
Media workplace research methods Media workplace research methods
Media workplace research methods
 
Hea liverpool may 2012
Hea liverpool may 2012 Hea liverpool may 2012
Hea liverpool may 2012
 

Dernier

Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxEmployee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxNirmalaLoungPoorunde1
 
Hybridoma Technology ( Production , Purification , and Application )
Hybridoma Technology  ( Production , Purification , and Application  ) Hybridoma Technology  ( Production , Purification , and Application  )
Hybridoma Technology ( Production , Purification , and Application ) Sakshi Ghasle
 
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphZ Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphThiyagu K
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityGeoBlogs
 
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdf
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK  LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdfBASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK  LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdf
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdfSoniaTolstoy
 
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactdawncurless
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Educationpboyjonauth
 
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptx
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptxCARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptx
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptxGaneshChakor2
 
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfSanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfsanyamsingh5019
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13Steve Thomason
 
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformA Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformChameera Dedduwage
 
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Sapana Sha
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104misteraugie
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxheathfieldcps1
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionSafetyChain Software
 
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptx
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptxPOINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptx
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptxSayali Powar
 
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinStudent login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinRaunakKeshri1
 

Dernier (20)

Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxEmployee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
 
Hybridoma Technology ( Production , Purification , and Application )
Hybridoma Technology  ( Production , Purification , and Application  ) Hybridoma Technology  ( Production , Purification , and Application  )
Hybridoma Technology ( Production , Purification , and Application )
 
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphZ Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
 
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdf
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK  LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdfBASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK  LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdf
BASLIQ CURRENT LOOKBOOK LOOKBOOK(1) (1).pdf
 
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
 
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSDStaff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
Staff of Color (SOC) Retention Efforts DDSD
 
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptx
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptxCARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptx
CARE OF CHILD IN INCUBATOR..........pptx
 
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfSanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
 
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformA Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
 
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
 
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptx
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptxPOINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptx
POINT- BIOCHEMISTRY SEM 2 ENZYMES UNIT 5.pptx
 
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdfTataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
 
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinStudent login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
 
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptxINDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
 

Media Theory Toolkit 2016

  • 1. Media Theory toolkit (1) Texts & Literacies (2) Concepts & Debates
  • 4. The plan: •The point of it all and the what and the how; •Texts and literacies – key concepts •Still image analysis •Moving image analysis (breaks as and when) Spot of lunch downstairs •Debates and perspectives: •Audiences, effects, reception •Power, democracy, ideology •Media 2.0 and ‘We Media’ •Postmodernism (breaks as and when)
  • 6. Using … 90 slides with many links Lots of images, moving images and sounds Some modelled learning plans Some Key Readings Lots of Charlie Brooker Some Zizek
  • 7. Texts and Meaning Reception Genre, Narrative, Representation Democracy Effects Regulation v Responsibilities Futures and utopia / dystopia Funding, access and citizenship Global Culture Identities Mickey Mouse?
  • 8. Understanding Media by Marshall McLuhan, Television by Raymond Williams Mythologies by Roland Barthes Simulacra and Simulation by Jean Baudrillard The Image by Daniel Boorstin Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman Dialectic of Enlightenment by Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno Manufacturing Consent by Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky No Sense of Place by Joshua Meyrowitz Television Culture by John Fiske NB - The notable name missing is Stuart Hall, who sadly never authored a 'text' as such (only edited them), but clearly warrants a place in a list of important media thinkers. ‘Laughey’s Canon’
  • 9. Sociocultural literacy (Bhabha and Gutierrez’s conceptions) Curriculum and power (Yandell) Cultural capital (Bourdieu) Funds of knowledge (Bourdieu, Marsh, Moll but also Parry et al) Semi permeable membrane (Potter, McDougall & Potter) The “Third Space” of learning
  • 10. THEORY / PRACTICE / PRAXIS
  • 11.
  • 12. Doing Text / Being Text
  • 13. Texts: Transmedia • Doctor Who has encompassed television, radio, literature, cinema and videogames, across 50 years. • All adds up to a rich metatext, with multiple access points – although television is clearly the dominant medium.
  • 14. Key Concepts: Genre | Narrative
  • 16. That the more restricted forms of textual engagement that English offers remain at the core of the National Curriculum and that English retains a relatively elevated academic status are testament to the strange but powerful grip of an educational order that has been and remains difficult to shake off. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3W99TKSwIMk The so-called ‘long revolution’ has indeed been ‘long’ as the young people say. We don’t know if the happy playground of Media Studies might in the very long run have some serious impact on the established academic order and might seriously challenge what Derrida has called the ‘violence’ that attends ‘the legitimization of canons’. Nick Peim, Preface to Doing Text.
  • 17.
  • 19.
  • 20. Image Literacy | Semiotics From Saussure and Barthes.From Saussure and Barthes. Signs.Signs. Symbols.Symbols. Myth.Myth. Micro to macro.Micro to macro. Polysemy and fluidity at level ofPolysemy and fluidity at level of connotationconnotation
  • 23. Camera Helps to Deliver Meaning • Shot Types – what meanings do a long shot and a Point of View (POV) shot help deliver? - Long shot – establishing shot, shows the viewer where they are in the scene. POV –feel as though you are part of the scene Shot Types Helps to Situate the Viewer • Angle – (high angle POV shot = superiority, low angle POV shot = weakness) • Movement - Zoom can highlight emotion on a character, Jerky hand held POV shot can provide tension and involvement in action sequences (e.g. Cloverfield) • Focus / Detail – Used to highlight important elements to the narrative / storyline
  • 24. Editing Helps to Deliver Meaning • Manipulation of Time / Space – flashbacks, Jump Cuts, Cross Cuts, etc • Rhythm and Pace – Fast paced / frequent cuts = action, slow paced / infrequent cuts = drama / romance • Persuasion – Edit tries to influence your view of the events • Ellipsis – When parts of the story (narrative) are edited out (can be explicit and implicit) • Dialectical montage (Eisenstein) – 2 different shots put together to construct meaning
  • 25. Sound | Image Helps to Deliver Meaning • Provides Anchorage (Romantic music + 2 people staring into each others eyes tells you that you are watching a romantic scene) • Contrast or Flow (can provide an indication as to whether the direction of a movie is changing or staying the same) • Diegetic Sound (sound that originates from within the movie narrative – e.g. the sound of a CD playing when an actor presses play.) • Non-diegetic sound (sound that is not part of the narrative – e.g. background music) Contributes to Mise en SceneContributes to Mise en Scene
  • 26. Mise en scene helps to deliver meaning •Refers to the overall Atmosphere / Ambience of a scene •What contributes to mise en scene? - Costume - Lighting - Props - Sound - Actors •Moving image = still images moving (Semiotics can be applied to help explain meaning) •Versisimilitude? - Where the scene provides a sense of realism (2 types:- Generic = realistic for the type of genre, Cultural = realistic because it mimics real life)
  • 27. Micro to Macro • What are Micro elements? – individual elements (such as camera angles, editing, sound, elements of mise en scene) Elements can be diegetic and non-diegetic. • What is Macro? What meaning the individual elements amount to • But always remember THE ACTIVE AUDIENCE MAKESTHE ACTIVE AUDIENCE MAKES THE MEANINGTHE MEANING (based on cultural experiences and literacy). There may be many ways a film can be interpreted (PolsyemyPolsyemy)
  • 28. Decoding: Bound up in identity Your examples of curation? Putting texts to work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwsQ_5Wm4oo
  • 29. Media Theory Toolkit: (2) Concepts and Perspectives @JulianMcDougall
  • 30. Theories of Culture Adorno: ‘Culture industry reconsidered’in New German Critique, 6, Fall 1975, 12-19 Hesmondalgh: ‘Creative and Cultural Industries’ in Bennett, (2008): The Sage Handbook of Cultural Analysis 552–569
  • 31. The Culture Industry or Cultural Industries? Adorno – standardisation (of cultural products and consumers) •Popular music (and jazz) – mass consumption, formula, subjugation •THE culture industry = monolothic, standardised •Political economy account – sets up mass production against the creative (high) artist. Hesmondalgh – plural cultural industries •Symbolic creators – degrees of creative autonomy, complexity and difference •Socio-cultural account – looks at structure / agency dynamics •Compares creative workers’ levels of freedom to other industries •Emphasises “contested ground’ upon which different kinds of cultural texts are produced” (Laughey, 2007: 126)
  • 32. Culture | Industry Adorno: ‘mass culture’ is structural: The cultural commodities of the industry are governed, as value, and not by their own specific content and harmonious formation. Anti-enlightenment Only their deep unconscious mistrust, the last residue of the difference between art and empirical reality in the spiritual make-up of the masses explains why they have not, to a person, long since perceived and accepted the world as it is constructed for them by the culture industry. Hesmondhalgh: ‘Cultural Industries’ = an attempt to pluralize Adorno’s flawed theory. Emphasis on contradiction and complexity in neo-liberal context. Those who prefer the term ‘cultural industries’ tend to be much more sober in their claims regarding the role of culture or creativity in modern economies and societies, and, as we shall see, considerably more sceptical about the benefits of marketization in the domain of culture, than what we might call the creativity or creative industries theorists.
  • 33. Work Adorno: transformations in the industrial production of art (Frankfurt School neo-Marxist tradition – along with Benjamin’s ‘mechanical reproduction’). Hesmondalgh: creative labour as “communication of experience through symbolic reproduction” (from Raymond Williams’ ‘Long Revolution’). Key ideas: autonomy (workplace + creative), self-realisation, divisions of labour.
  • 34. Culture Industry, Creative Industry, Creative Work Mass media central to consumer economy since 1950s. Internet, social media and inter-active media – paradigm shift? Lopez (2012) – 4 elements to neo-liberal hegemony of culture: •Privatisation •Commodification •Crisis for control •Enclosure of creative commons – by corporations. Autonomy of the creative worker: Policies that argue for a radical expansion of these industries under present conditions, without attention to the conditions of creative labour, risk fuelling labour markets marked by irregular, insecure and unprotected work. (Hesmondalgh) Sociological focus in STRUCTURE and AGENCY (Bourdieu, Giddens).
  • 35.
  • 36. Discussion • Creative Labour • Authenticity • Autonomy • Culture • INDUSTRIES – Art, Film, Museum, Graffiti Group 1 - What would Adorno say? Group 2 - Apply Hesmondalgh?
  • 39. Audience, Effects, Reception Although we might think of media habits as mundane and idiosyncratic, the fact that we all have them shows structural forces afoot. (Ruddock: 77)
  • 40.
  • 41. Models of Mass Media ‘Classic’ (outdated or timeless?) models: • Shannon and Weaver, 1949 • Galtung and Ruge, 1965 • Blumer and Katz,1974
  • 42. Ideology and Interpellation Key example = gender based magazines Nuts does four things: 1. Represents men to men. 2. Represents men to women. 3. Represents women to men. 4. Represents women to women.
  • 43. Men’s magazine covers = women Women’s magazine covers = women Why?
  • 44. Complicity Key Reading: Althusser: Interpellation (misrecognition) Winship: complicity and (false) belonging Gauntlett – irony / play
  • 45. Feminism (Butler) Gender is not natural, it is learned and PERFORMED Playful renegotiation of gender = gender trouble (a subversive act) Madonna, Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift Grayson Perry See Gauntlett – Media, Gender, Identity
  • 46. Moral Panics Cohen, S, 1972. Key Reading: Charles Krinsky
  • 47.
  • 48.
  • 50. Murder of James Bulger by two boys Shocked public reaction Trial: search for blame Father’s videoshop membership info CP3 picked on by press Spurious links with narrative offered
  • 51. Recent panics Videogames Online activity Campus killings / knife and gun crime / gangs and Youtube Texting, internet and literacy Electronic media and obesity Screen / web addiction Social skills in decline due to internet
  • 53. National Identity? Films do not present a neutral, transparent view of reality, but offer instead a mediated re-presentation of it. Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings Key Reading: Paul Gilroy
  • 54.
  • 55. Text-Case 1 Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings
  • 56. Text-Case 2 Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings
  • 57. Text-Case 3 Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4G_UYK0Rkk
  • 58. Text-Case 4 Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings
  • 59. Text-Case 5 Types of Realism Discourses Ideology Othering Plural readings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4KbJLpu7yo
  • 60. Postcolonial power Laughing at oneself is an extension of the subjective positioning of the colonized that – internalization of inferiority. But other examples of resistance – women on screen in hybrid game shows.
  • 61.
  • 62. Ownership and Media Power A Marxist view of media will focus on the relationship between the providers of media, broader power structures and the messages in media products circulated by these power-holding institutions. This is media hegemony / ideology theory.
  • 63. Marxist ideology theory presents the media as a controlling force. Effects theories tend to assume a passive audience. Reception theory sees audiences as active makers of meaning. Audiences may read the media as the producers intended (preferred reading - hegemonic). They may partly share the preferred response (negotiated reading) They may interpret the text in an alternative way (oppositional, counter- hegemonic reading). But ideology doesn’t go away. Ask Zizek.
  • 64. We Media | The Empire Strikes Back
  • 68. Media Theory Toolkit: Media 2.0? @JulianMcDougall
  • 70. Media 2.0 Lots of DIFFERENT IDEAS on this. Very much a CONTESTED view.
  • 71. Merrin | Gauntlett Media 1.0 • Celebrates key texts produced by media moguls and celebrated by well-known critics • Vague recognition of internet and new digital media, as an 'add on' to the traditional media • A preference for conventional ideas where most people are treated as non-expert audience 'receivers', or, if they are part of the formal media industries, as expert 'producers'.
  • 72. Merrin | Gauntlett Media 2.0 • Interest in the massive 'long tail' of independent media projects such as those found on YouTube and many other websites, mobile devices, and other forms of DIY media Recognition that internet and digital media have fundamentally changed the ways in which we engage with all media • Media now more democratic through people making and connecting
  • 73.
  • 74. So – for Media Studies: WHAT COUNTS?
  • 76. New frameworks? ). Apply new framework to: Lego Movie Talking dog Fake JL ad Your two choices of media 2.0 viral
  • 77. Merrin (2014) Mass media and computing converged at the end of the 20th century with material, ecological, cultural and personal transformations. What are these, for you? Media Studies is a product of the analogue, broadcast era, emerging in the early 20th century as a response to the success of newspapers, radio and cinema and reflecting that era back in its organisation, themes and concepts. Does it seem this way to you? If so, how? If not, why not? Digitalisation takes us beyond this analogue era (media studies 1.0) into a new, post-broadcast era. This era demands an upgraded academic discipline: one reflecting the real media life of its students and teaching the key skills needed by the 21st-century user. Media 2.0 demand a media studies 2.0. What do you think this would look like? If digital media are the result of the meeting and merger of computing and mass media then we need to teach our students computing to enable them to produce software and products for themselves. One thing at least is certain: filling students’ time by teaching them how to use a video camera or making them pretend to be a newsreader in a fake studio is a waste of their fees and an inadequate training for the 21st century. What about your fees, then?
  • 78. Merrin (2014) Print, radio, cinema and television have been transformed in their material basis, ecological position and relationships, cultural production, distribution and consumption and their individual use. Each medium has had to Realign itself to meet the demands of a different era and different market conditions, changing their economic models, content creation, modes of distribution, relationship with other forms and even their own idea of what they are doing and how their forms will be used. Apply to television - discuss. Whilst media studies 2.0 privileges digital media as a revolutionary force in consuming older forms and practices and creating new modes of media experience, it isn’t an uncritical celebration of these forms or these modes. McLuhan commented how ‘ many people seem to think that if you talk about something recent, you’re in favour of it’ and discussions of digital media attract the same reaction. Manovich already argued in The Language of New Media (2001) that ‘ new media calls for a new stage in media theory’ , suggesting that ‘ to understand the logic of new media, we need to turn to computer science. It is there that we may expect to find the new terms, categories and operations that characterise media that became programmable.’ Computing can serve as a key research tool for the digital environment, with data visualisation software allowing the analysis of large collections of information. In order to be able to write media today our students need to know how to produce software, how to employ or create digital tools and platforms, and how to navigate and use the digital ecology. ‘ Media practice’, therefore, needs to be reorientated towards training students in computing and the digital ecology. Today’ s user needs up- to-date, practical knowledge of how to best take advantage of digital technologies and, like the hacker, how to secure their communications, anonymise or hide their activities and delete and control their digital footprint. These may well be the most important ‘ practice’ skills of the 21st century. How are we doing here?
  • 80. Morozov • View that the web is emancipatory is a “mis-reading of history” • Part of the technologically deterministic, cyber-utopian “Google Doctrine” or “Twitter Agenda”, ie a mirror image of a moral panic… • Governments are actually using the web for propaganda, control, surveillance, censorship and suppression • Big Data - an algorithmic panopticon?
  • 81. Present Shock? Alvin Toffler’s radical 1970 book, Future Shock, theorized that things were changing so fast we would soon lose the ability to cope. Rushkoff argues that the future is now and we’re contending with a fundamentally new challenge. Whereas Toffler said we were disoriented by a future that was careening toward us, Rushkoff argues that we no longer have a sense of a future, of goals, of direction at all. We have a completely new relationship to time; we live in an always-on “now,” where the priorities of this moment seem to be everything. Wall Street traders no longer invest in a future; they expect profits off their algorithmic trades themselves, in the ultra-fast moment. Voters want immediate results from their politicians, having lost all sense of the historic timescale on which government functions. Kids txt during parties to find out if there’s something better happening in the moment, somewhere else. Douglas Rushkoff
  • 82. • Many scholars very much against the media 2.0 hypothesis • It is very cynical about theory, but does draw heavily from theorists such as Bourdieu and McLuhan • Celebrates the “power of active users” , ignoring the commercial structures that help to shape those powers • Ignores real material and cultural constraints? – Gender inequality? – Poverty? – Who’s online?
  • 83. Back to …. The story of text Radical democracy or not, something is happening to text ‘after the media’ …
  • 84. Games and Media Concepts 1.0 Genre Narrative Representation Audience Effects 2.0 Ludology Play Flow Immersion Identity Key Reading; Frasca
  • 86.
  • 87.
  • 88.
  • 89. FLATTENED TEXTUALITY Key reading: Videogames as (authorless literature)
  • 90. The Postmodern: Baudrillard’s hyper-real? neither dream nor reality but simulacrum – fetishised reality
  • 91. Virtual reality = product deprived of its substance. “Just as decaffeinated coffee smells and tastes like real coffee without being real coffee,Virtual reality is experienced as reality without being so.What happens at the end of this process of virtualization, however, is that we begin to experience ‘real reality’ itself as a virtual entity”. (2002:231)
  • 92. Thanks for coming! More stuff in Dropbox … Slides with links Learning plans Links to resources / further reading julian@cemp.ac.uk

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. I need to address this use of the word “Third Space” in the context of literacy now Its origins lie in the work of Bhaba (See the pact of interpretation quote…) The meaning which we are trying to make in our communication with each other is always negotiated – something of what I want to convey and something of what you want to hear makes this “third space”. Sometimes this is a real space, an after –school club, a walk to school, the activity of a sports team, play on a screen, climbing a tree with some friends, making a den or shelter – play of all kinds creates this space A spatial metaphor indicates a terrain, and Gutierrez delineates movement across that terrain, learners in transition (as we have seen this is an area of study which Oystein Gilje and colleagues operate within) Bhabha locaed it within the actual communicative act itself Further conceptions talk about the classroom itself as the site of struggle – from a neoliberal imaginary fixing people as assessment items to a negotiation with the curriculum itself…
  2. LEGO SERIOUS PLAY ACTIVITY?
  3. Madness and Kid British vids and activity.
  4. Super Size Me clip.
  5. EXPLAIN JIGSAW METHOD.
  6. ----- Meeting Notes (25/02/2014 17:29) ----- Play vid and discuss
  7. Newswipe episode.
  8. Made in Dagenham Neds
  9. SHOW CLIPS OR REPLACE
  10. Outfoxed extract and discussion. Suggest Wag the Dog. In the Loop / The Thick of It. Others?
  11. From Danna Boyd Ideology, identity, post-modern, neo-liberal, fragmented. Things have changed since the Birmingham School were allowed to ‘mess around’. Show Zizek on Starbucks and Curtis.
  12. How to account for shared expertise and more porous interchange?
  13. L A Noir research
  14. ----- Meeting Notes (07/03/2012 11:07) ----- Describe new project - play vid
  15. Article p9-10.
  16. Another Perfect World vid