Anchorage - how
meaning is fixed, as in how a caption fixes the meaning of a picture
Applied Photography - Applied Photography illustrates, records and provides information about all or part of any man-made object or natural feature that has been influenced by man. Essential requirements are sharpness of focus and overall technical quality conveying the maximum amount of information. Pictorial content is of secondary importance.
Applied Photography - Applied Photography illustrates, records and provides information about all or part of any man-made object or natural feature that has been influenced by man. Essential requirements are sharpness of focus and overall technical quality conveying the maximum amount of information. Pictorial content is of secondary importance.
Audience – viewers,
listeners and readers of a media text. A lot of media studies is concerned with
how audience use texts and the effects a text may have on them. Also identified
in demographic socio-economic categories.
Binary Opposites –
the way opposites are used to create interest in media texts, such as good/bad,
coward/hero, youth/age, black/white. By Barthes and Levi-Strauss who also
noticed another important feature of these ‘binary opposites': that one side of
the binary pair is always seen by a particular society or culture as more
valued over the other.
Catharsis – the idea
that violent and and sexual content in media texts serves the function of
releasing ‘pent up’ tension aggression/desire in audiences.
Censorship – Control
over the content of a media text – sometimes by the government, but usually by
a regulatory body like the British Board of Film censors.
Code – a sign or
convention through which the media communicates meaning to us because we have
learned to read it. Technical codes – all to do with the way a text is
technically constructed – camera angles, framing, typography, lighting etc.
Visual codes – codes that are decoded on a mainly connotational level – things
that draw on our experience and understanding of other media texts, this
includes Iconography – which is concerned with the use of visual images and how
they trigger the audiences expectations of a particular genre, such as a knife
in slasher horror films.
Consumer –
purchaser, listener, viewer or reader of media products.
Context – time,
place or mindset in which we consume media products.
Conventions – the
widely recognised way of doing things in particular genre.
Denotation – the
everyday or common sense meaning of a sign. Connotation – the secondary meaning
that a sign carries in addition to it’s everyday meaning.
Diegetic Sound –
Sound whose source is visible on the screen Non Diegetic sound – Sound effects,
music or narration which is added afterwards
Enigma – A question
in a text that is not immediately answered and creates interest for the
audience – a puzzle that the audience has to solve.
Feminism – the
struggle by women to obtain equal rights in society
Gaze – the idea that
the way we look at something, and the way somebody looks at you, is structured
by the way we view the world. Feminist Laura Mulvey suggests that looking
involves power, specifically the look of men at women, implying that men have
power over women.
Genre – the type or
category of a media text, according to its form, style and content.
Hegemony –
Traditionally this describes the predominance of one social class over another,
in media terms this is how the controllers of the media may on the one hand use
the media to pursue their own political interest, but on the other hand the
media is a place where people who are critical of the establishment can air
their views.
Hypodermic Needle
Theory – the idea that the media can ‘inject’ ideas and messages straight into
the passive audience. This passive audience is immediately affected by these messages.
Used in advertising and propoganda, led to moral panics about effect of violent
video and computer games.
Ideology – A set of
ideas or beliefs which are held to be acceptable by the creators of the media
text, maybe in line with those of the dominant ruling social groups in society,
or alternative ideologies such as feminist ideology.
Indexical sign – a
sign which has a direct relationship with something it signifies, such as smoke
signifies fire.
Image – a visual
representation of something.
Institutions – The
organisations which produce and control media texts such as the BBC, AOL Time
Warner, News International.
Intertextuality –
the idea that within popular culture producers borrow other texts to create
interest to the audience who like to share the ‘in’ joke. Used a lot in the
Simpsons.
Media language – the
means by which the media communicates to us and the forms and conventions by
which it does so.
Media product – a
text that has been designed to be consumed by an audience. E.G a film, radio
show, newspaper etc.
Media text – see
above. N.B Text usually means a piece of writing
Mise en Scene –
literally ‘what’s in the shot’ everything that appears on the screen in a
single frame and how this helps the audience to decode what’s going on.
Mode of Address –
The way a media product ‘speaks’ to it’s audience. In order to communicate, a
producer of any text must make some assumptions about an intended audience;
reflections of such assumptions may be discerned in the text (advertisements
offer particularly clear examples of this).
Montage – putting
together of visual images to form a sequence. Made famous by Russian film maker
Eisenstein in his famous film Battleship Potemkin.
Moral Panic – is the
intensity of feeling stirred up by the media about an issue that appears to threaten the
social order, such as against Muslims after 9/11, or against immigrants, or
against ‘video nasties’ following the
Jamie Bulger murder.
Multi-media –
computer technology that allows text, sound, graphic and video images to be
combined into one programme.
Myth – a complex
idea by Roland Barthes that myth is a second order signifying system ie when a
sign becomes the signifier of a new sign (2nd years only this one!)
Narrative code – The
way a story is put together within a text, traditionally equilibrium-
disequilibrium, new equilibrium, but some text are fractured or non liner, eg
Pulp Fiction.
News values –
factors that influence whether a story will be picked for coverage.
Non-verbal
communication – communication between people other than by speech.
Ownership – who
produces and distributes the media texts – and whose interest it is.
Patriarchy – The
structural, systematic and historical domination and exploitation of women.
Popular Culture –
the study of cultural artefacts of the mass media such as cinema, TV,
advertising.
Post Modernism –
Anything that challenges the traditional way of doing things, rejecting
boundaries between high and low forms of art, rejecting rigid genre
distinctions, emphasizing pastiche, parody, intertextuality, irony, and
playfulness. Postmodernism favours reflexivity and self-consciousness,
fragmentation and discontinuity (especially in narrative structures),
ambiguity, simultaneity, and an emphasis on the destructured, decentered,
dehumanized subjects! This is tricky!
Preferred Reading -
the interpretation of a media product that was intended by the maker or which
is dictated by the ideology of the society in which it is viewed. Oppositional
Reading – an interpretation of a text by a reader whose social position puts
them into direct conflict with its preferred reading. Negotiated Reading – the
‘compromise’ that is reached between the preferred reading offered by a text
and the reader’s own assumptions and interpretations
Propaganda – the way
ruling classes use the mass media to control or alter the attitudes of others.
Reader – a member of
the audience, someone who is actively responding to the text.
Regulation – bodies
whose job it is to see that media texts are not seen by the wrong audience (eg
British Board of Film Censors) or are fair and honest (EG Advertising Standards
Association)
Representation – The
way in which the media ‘re-presents’ the world around us in the form of signs
and codes for audiences to read.
SFX – special
effects or devices to create visual illusions.
Shot – single image
taken by a camera.
Sign – a word or
image that is used to represent an object or idea.
Signifier/Signified
– the ‘thing’ that conveys the meaning, and the meaning conveyed. EG a red rose
is a signifier, the signified is love (or the Labour Party!)
Sound Effects –
additional sounds other than dialogue or music, designed to add realism or atmosphere.
Stereotype –
representation of people or groups of people by a few characteristics eg
hoodies, blondes
Still – static
image.
Sub-genre – a genre
within a genre.
Two Step Flow theory
– the idea that ideas flow from mass media to opinion leaders, and from them to
a wider population.
Uses and
Gratifications – ideas about how people use the media and what gratification
they get from it. It assumes that members of the audience are not passive but
take an active role in interpreting and integrating media into their own lives.
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