23rd February: Revision 3: Representation

STARTER

Media Theories Summary Quiz

REVIEW

You now have 5 minutes to review the feedback from last lesson's assignment. Use the feedback to improve future responses.

EXPLAIN & MODEL

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK FOCUS: REPRESENTATION

Key Points:

  • Representation is the way in which aspects of society and social identity, issues and events are re-presented to an audience.
  • All media products are constructions, they do not simply reflect the real world and the representations within them are also constructions as they are not real but are often accepted as such by an audience because they give an illusion of reality.
  • The creators of media products make choices about how representated through selection and combination.
  • The representation is controlled by the product's creators and, as such, encodes values, attitudes and beliefs.
  • The repetition by the media of a particular representation may result in that representation being accepted as normal.
  • Representations are affected by the context and purpose.
  • Media products may construct stereotypes which can be both positive and negative.
  • Representations position audiences differently and audience responses may vary.
  • Stuart Hall's Representation Theory: Suggests that stereotyping, as a form of representation, reduces people to a few simple characteristics or traits. Stereotyping tends to occur where there are inequalities of power, as subordinate or excluded groups are constructed as different or 'other' (e.g. through ethnocentrism).
  • David Gauntlett's Identity Theory: Suggests that while in the past the media tended to convey singular, straightforward messages about the ideal types of male and female identities. The media today offers a more diverse range from which we can pick and mix different ideas to construct our own identities.
  • Liesbet Van Zoonen's Feminist Theory: Suggests that media contributes to social change by representing women in non-traditional roles. Suggests the idea that the display of women's bodies as objects to be looked at is a core element of Western patriarchal society.
  • bell hooks' Feminist Theory: Suggests the idea that feminism is a struggle to end patriarchal oppression and feminism is a political commitment rather than a lifestyle choice. Suggests pale-skinned women are represented as more desirable in Western media. Suggests that race and class, as well as sex, determine the extent to which individuals are exploited, discriminated against or oppressed.
  • Judith Butler (Theory of Gender Performativity): Suggests that identity is performatively constructed by the very 'expressions' that are said to be its results (it is manufactured through a set of acts). Suggests that there is no gender identity behing the expressions of gender. Suggests that performativity is not a singular act but a repetition and a ritual.
  • Paul Gilroy (Ethnicity & Postcolonial Theory): Suggests that colonial discourses continue to inform contemporary attitudes to race and ethnicity. Suggests that civilisationism constructs racial hierarchies and sets up binary oppositions based on notions of 'otherness'.
Key Language:

  • Construction
  • Decoding & Encoding
  • Mediation
  • Selection & Combination
  • Stereotypes
  • Context & Purpose
  • Tokenism

REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN
  • The representation of women has developed to reflect changes in society in relation to women's roles, creating more realistic representations and positive role models.
  • However, stereotypical representations of women still exist in some media forms and products. These unrealistic representations tend to define women by how they look and their relationships. This creates unattainable aspirations for the audience.
  • Where women are constructed in a more positive way, challenging outdated stereotypes, they are seen as more active and have a key role in shaping the narrative. They are defined by what they do, rather than what they have done to them.
  • Representations of women change in order to reflect cultural shifts in relation to gender and to satisfy audience expectations.
  • Some theorists argue that, while women's roles and representations in the media have changed, they are equally limiting, as women are expected to be 'strong' and demonstrate masculine attributes.

REPRESENTATIONS OF MEN
  • While there have been some fundamental changes in representations, masculinity tends to be defined by physical strength, sexual attractiveness, success in relationships and power. This is reflected in some media forms more than others, for example, advertising.
  • Other forms, for example the music video, while reinforcing some typical male characteristics, have also been a platform that allows men to present themselves as more rounded, realistic individuals.
  • Toxic masculinity referes to harmful behaviour and attitudes commonly associated with some men, such as the need to repress emotions during stressful situations and to act in an aggressively dominant way.

REPRESENTATIONS OF ETHNICITY
  • Many areas of the media offer positive representations of minority groups and there are fewer instances whereby these social groups are defined as being 'other'.
  • However, the construction of stereotypes and the misrepresentation of these groups remains problematic. The way these groups are presented in the media is often the only experience of these cultures that an audience may encounter and so will accept it as the truth.
  • Certain stereotypical representations are reinforced across different forms. This perpetuates a negative representation of these groups. (E.g. young black male defined in terms of gang culture and violence).

REPRESENTATIONS OF ISSUES & EVENTS
  • Some newspapers make their dominant ideology evident in their front pages or articles.
  • Documentaries can be biased and selective in the information they give about an issue or event.
  • Some media forms are creative in the way they represent issues and give a very personal viewpoint.
  • In the representation of an issue or event by the media, it is as much to do with what is left out as what is selected for inclusion.

PRACTISE

Compare the representations of men in these two Gillette adverts (see Google assignment), referring to the theoretical framework. The first advert is from 1989 and the second is from 2019. Use key language and signpost evidence using audio visual media language.


8th February: Revision 2: Genre & Narrative Theories

STARTER

Let's start with a few quick quizzes;


REVIEW

You will now have 5 minutes to review the feedback from last week's assignment. Use the feedback to improve future responses, maintaining an academic lexis.

EXPLAIN & MODEL

KEY THEORY: GENRE THEORY

Key Points:

  • Each genre has a repertoire of elements that are recognisable to audiences due to repetition over time.
  • However, some contemporary media products may be less easy to categorise; they may belong to sub-genres or hybrid genres.
  • The typical codes and conventions may also be subverted by the creator of the product in order to challenge audience expectations while still including familiar elements.
  • Steve Neale's Genre Theory:
  • Suggests that genres may be dominated by repetition, but they are also marked by difference, variation and change.
  • Suggests that genres change, develop and vary as they borrow from and overlap with one another.
  • Suggests that genres exist within specific economic, institutional and industrial contexts (broadcaster ethos, existing audiences, revenue & market).
Quick Question: What is the difference between a sub-genre and a hybrid?

Key Language:

  • Conventions
  • Repetition
  • Difference
  • Sub-Genre
  • Hybrid

KEY THEORY: NARRATIVE THEORY

Key Points:

  • All media products, both audio-visual and print, have a structure or narrative.
  • Narratives are important to construct meaning. The narrative is a way of organising a text so that it makes sense to the audience.
  • Narratology is the study of narrative.
  • Tzvetan Todorov's Narrative Theory:
  • Suggests that all narratives share a basic structure that involves movement from one state of equilibrium to another (Equilibrium, Disruption, Recognition, Repair, New Equilibrium)
  • Suggests that the two states of equilibrium are separated by a period of imbalance or disequilibrium.
  • Suggests that the way in which narratives are resolved can have a particular ideological significance.
Quick Question: Can you think of any media texts that do not share this basic narrative structure?

Key Language:

  • Equilibrium
  • Disruption
  • Enigma Codes
  • Flexi-Narratives
  • Linear
  • Manipulation of Time and Space
  • Non-Linear
  • Privileged Spectator Position
  • Three-Strand Narrative (E.g. Casualty)
  • Cliffhanger

PRACTISE

Genre Theory:

Examine the media text below and answer the question that follows (Google Assignment).
  1. How does this film poster illustrate elements of Steve Neale's Theory? Consider the following;
    • What are the typical codes and conventions of the film genre used in the poster?
    • What elements of hybridity are evident?
    • How is the repertoire of elements subverted in order to appeal to a specific audience demographic?


Narrative Theory

Click on this link and suggest captions for the image to anchor meaning, constructing two opposing narratives. Screenshot your suggestions and post in your blog.

Click on this link and complete the narrative structure summary for a media text you know well. Screenshot your response and post in your blog.

2nd February: Revision 1: The Theoretical Framework

Each lesson we will revise an aspect of the course. You will then be asked to demonstrate your understanding of that aspect by completing an unprepared task. Let's make a start...

KEY THEORY: SEMIOTICS

Key Points:

  • Roland Barthes
  • Suggests the idea that all texts communicate their meaning through a series of signs, the meanings of which are decoded by the audience.
  • Signs function at the level of denotation and connotation.
  • Signs can communicate the ideology of a society and, as such, become accepted because they appear natural through repetition over time.
  • Audiences may not decode signs in the same way; their responses will be affected by a range of other factors.
Quick Question: What are the range of factors that may affect the audience's response?

Key Language:
  • Semiotics
  • Denotation
  • Polysemic
  • Connotation
  • Decoding
  • Encoding
  • Sign
  • Codes

Application:

To test your ability to define and apply the key language, complete the Educaplay activity on our Google Classroom.


VISUAL CODES
  • Clothing
  • Colour
  • Expression
  • Gesture
  • Graphics
  • Iconography
  • Images
  • Technique (see below)

TECHNICAL CODES (Audio Visual Products)
  • Camera Shot (distance)
  • Camera Shot (focus)
  • Camera Angle
  • Camera Movement
  • Transitions
  • Lighting
  • Diegetic / Non-Diegetic Sound
  • Contrapuntal / Parallel Underscore

TECHNICAL CODES (Print Products)
  • Design & Layout
  • Graphics
  • Image shot types
  • Image colour, etc

TIP: When exploring technical codes, you must make sure that you don't just describe / label the technical code. You must focus on the purpose and the effect of it too!


TASK

Use the extract below to answer the question in the 'Unseen Analysis 1' assignment on Google Classroom. You have 20 minutes to complete your response. At the end of the 20 minutes, we will review the responses, signposting excellence and suggesting EBIs. Use time references to signpost examples. I will model a review before sending you to breakout rooms in pairs.


Additional Information: Villanelle (Blonde) and Eve (Dark Hair).

We will use Google Doc comments to review each other's work. Once the review process is over, you will have time to make improvements to your response, using a different colour to identify these improvements. Once this is complete, you will hand in your assignment.