mass communication & media literacy 06
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Mass Communication & Media Literacy 06

http://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/campaigning/takeaction/campaigners_pack/press_myths

Identify/outline issues involved in thinking about representation and media
Define the concepts of representation, stereotyping and associated sub-categories
Use rhetorical, semiological, genre and narrative analysis to analyse media representations
Examine debates around the depiction of individuals and social groups

Questions
What kind of groups feature in your text?How would you categorise the individuals
and/or groups depicted?What kinds of ideas and feelings about them
do you have as a result of your media consumption?

Why Representation
Media forms have their own rhetoric and language that position us as audience members for entertainment purposes, they are not divorced from the social, cultural, political and historical contexts of their making.
Representation informs our understanding and outlook on various groups and individuals – which can affect how social relations are played out.

Represent
Equivalence/corresponding to Proxy/substitute for something or someone
elseTypify/epitomise

Representation
To represent something is to describe or depictit, to call it up in the mind by description,portrayal or imagination. To represent alsomeans to symbolise, to stand for, to be aspecimen of or substitute to.

All media forms contain only a fraction of what could have been presented – they are selective in their portrayals and are thus abstractions in the way they work at emphasising or inflections limited elements or characteristics of what is on show or known.

Representation
How the media shows us things about society – through a careful process of mediation – hence, re-presentation.
For representation to be meaningful to audiences there needs to be a shared recognition of people, situations, ideas etc.
All representation therefore have ideologies behind them. Certain paradigms are encoded into texts and others left out in order to give a preferred meaning.

Representation
When analysing media representations in general it’s useful to ask a few questions posed by Richard Dyer (1983):
1. What sense of the world is it making?2. What does it imply?3. Is it typical of the world or deviant?4. Who is it speaking to? For whom? To whom?5. What does it represent to us and why? How do you
respond?

Representation
1. What sense of the world is it making?
2. What does it imply?3. Is it typical of the
world or deviant?4. Who is it speaking to?
For whom? To whom?5. What does it
represent to us and why? How do you respond?

Ideology and representation
A hegemonic view of society – fundamental inequalities in power between different groups. Groups in power exercise their influence culturally rather than by force (‘soft’ power)
This concept has its origins in Marxist theory – it explains how the ruling class can protect economic interests.
Representations are therefore encoded into mass media texts in order to do this – to reinforce dominant ideologies in society.

Ideology and representation

Ideology and representation
Ideology refers to a set of ideas which produces a partial and selective view of reality. The notion of ideology entails widely held ideas or beliefs which are seen as ‘common sense’ and become naturalised (Tim O’Sullivan, 1998).
What is important is that the media’s role can be seen as: Circulating and reinforcing dominant ideologies Undermining and challenging such ideologies (less
often)

Ideology and representation
Ideologies are never simply ideas in people’s heads but are actually myths that we live by and which contribute to our self worth. (remember Barthes?)
Think about documentaries: how are our national, regional and historical identities constructed through the mediation of a text?
‘Identities are not ‘given’ but are constructed and negotiated.’ (David Gauntlett, 20020)

Postmodernism and representation
Life becomes a soap opera. The trial’s of OJ Simpson and Michael Jackson are examples - neither real nor a simulation
The Gulf war as hyper-real - it never happened
Reality mixes with ‘art’, a supposed reflection of postmodernism’s ‘slipperiness’ when it comes to truth.
Politics as entertainment - the projection and consumption of hyper-real images.
Collapse of boundaries between classes, high and low culture, politics and news and entertainment but ultimately between reality and simulation.
This has led to a collapse of meaning. The ‘real’ society that existed before the takeoff of this latest stage of mass consumer capitalism has disappeared into a black hole - replaced by the terminal of the hyperreal - the TV screen.

Postmodernism and representation

Depicting individuals
Trevor MacDonaldTV NewsreaderMiddle classMan
What else does this media figure ‘represent’?

Depicting individuals
George MichaelPop star in concert
What other ideas does the media figure represent?

The campaign to find Madeleine McCann
What do such images come to represent beyond the literal identification of a lost child?

Types
Types A grouping based on shared characteristics; a class. An individual that represents the ideal for its class; an
embodiment. Archetypes
A perfect or idealised person or thing that exhibits such core values and identities that offer a model or pattern for the way in which a culture is viewed
Stereotypes Stereotyping is a process involving the expression of an
exaggerated belief about a group that serves to qualify or justify the conduct towards that group of those who hold and express that belief.

The archetype
The wealth of music Curtis Jackson released and his 2000 shooting conspired to turn 50 Cent the rapper into a local legend before his debut album had even been released. In some senses, he represents the latest incarnation of an archetype that crops up time and again in popular music. Early blues singers often retold in song the story of a deadly confrontation between Billy Lyons and a pimp called Lee Shelton ( known variously as Stagger Lee or Stagolee), two real-life characters from the Deep South whose 1895 shoot-out resulted in Lyons's death.In Stagolee Shot Billy, a book about the social history of the myth, writer Cecil Brown describes how Stagolee's persona as the 'bad black hero' feeds into our perception of characters as varied as Puff Daddy, OJ Simpson, Malcolm X and Huey Newton.

Stereotypes
Stereotypes Stereotyping is a process involving the expression of
an exaggerated belief about a group that serves to qualify or justify the conduct towards that group of those who hold and express that belief.
Stereotypes are a form of shorthand narrative

Building stereotypes
Appearance
Behaviour
Fit
Implicit/explicit comparison

Functions of stereotypes in media texts
Functions for stereotypes in media texts relate them to broader social and historical contexts
An ordering function – a short-cut to meaning in the face of the messiness of reality
A metonymic function - an index of a wider reality and set of values about the group (one person ‘stands for’ the group)

Stereotypes: difficulties
According to Tessa Perkins (1979):
Stereotypes aren’t always negative (French good cooks)
They aren’t always about minority groups or those less powerful (upper class twits)
They are not always false – they may be supported by empirical evidence
They are not always rigid and unchanging

(new) Media Representations
With the development of ubiquitous, cheap and easy to use equipment and the electronic networks for distribution, media representations have proliferated over the last ten years.
The following are some experiments that are harnessing those developments.

(new) Media Representations
http://www.bbc.co.uk/videonation/network/
http://www.mappingmainstreet.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/lifeinaday
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00kqz5p
http://dziga.perrybard.net/
http://www.onedayonearth.org/
http://www.18daysinegypt.com/
http://globallives.org/en/