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559. Audience – Adapted from Steve Baker’s Media Studies website.

April 26, 2009 Leave a comment

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The audience as mass

The key ideas about media audiences that you should remember are these:

The media are often experienced by people alone. (Some critics have talked about media audiences as atomised- cut off from other people like separate atoms)
Wherever they are in the world, the audience for a media text are all receiving exactly the same thing.
As you will see from what follows, both of these ideas have been questioned. These points led some early critics of the media to come up with the idea of media audiences as masses. According to many theorists, particularly in the early history of the subject, when we listen to our CDs or sit in the cinema, we become part of a mass audience in many ways like a crowd at a football match or a rock concert but at the same time very different because separated from all the other members of this mass by space and sometimes time.

If you look at the early history off the media, it is fairly easy to see where the idea of a mass audience came from. Within less than a hundred years photography, Film, radio and television were all invented. Each one of them allowed works of art or pieces of entertainment that might once have been restricted to the number of people who could fit into an art gallery or a theatre to be transmitted in exactly the same form to enormous numbers of people in different parts of the world. It can be very easy, living in this media saturated world to forget how strange this might once have seemed. These media quickly became extremely popular and at the same time there was an important difference between them and older forms of entertainment. Whereas in the past, many forms of entertainment were only available to those who could afford them, now suddenly films and radio particularly were available to all. Early media theorists struggled to understand this and found it easiest to compare the media audiences with the kinds of crowds they were used to from the world before the media- they came up with the ideas of the mass audience. Here is how the sociologist Herbert Blumer described it in 1950:

First, its membership may come from all walks of life, and from all distinguishable social strata; it may include people of different class position, of different vocation, of different cultural attainment, and of different wealth. ….. Secondly, the mass is an anonymous group, or more exactly is composed of anonymous individuals [Blumer means anonymous in the sense that unlike the citizens of earlier communities, the people who are members of the mass audience for the media do not know each other]. Third, there exists little interaction or change of experience between members of the mass. They are usually physically separated from one another, and, being anonymous, do not have the opportunity to mill as do members of the crowd. Fourth, the mass is very loosely organised and is not able to act with the concertedness or unity of a crowd.

Blumer was writing about the media in 1950, five years after the Second World War. During the war and before it, Hitler in Germany and Stalin in Russia had attempted to use the media as propaganda- through films, radio and poster art they had attempted to persuade mass audiences to follow their policies- to the critics of the time it is not surprising that the media must have seemed like a dangerous weapon in the wrong hands, capable of persuading millions to follow evil men. In the recent general election, you will have found it difficult to avoid seeing similar, if less offensive propaganda. How much influence do you think the posters that covered Britain’s roadsides might have had on the final outcome of the election? It is impossible to give a certain answer to this, but the different political parties obviously believe in their power, if you consider the millions of pounds they spend on them.

Key Theory 1: The hypodermic syringe

There have been a number of theories over the years about how exactly the media work on the mass audience. Perhaps the most simple to understand is the hypodermic syringe. This has been very popular down the years with many people who fear the effects of the media.

According to the theory the media is like a syringe which injects ideas, attitudes and beliefs into the audience who as a powerless mass have little choice but to be influenced- in other words, you watch something violent, you may go and do something violent, you see a woman washing up on T.V. and you will want to do the same yourself if you are a woman and if you are a man you will expect women to do the washing up for you.

This theory has been particularly popular when people have been considering violence in films. There have been films such as Straw Dogs and The Evil Dead which have been banned partly because of a belief that they might encourage people to copy the crimes within them but on the other hand no-one has ever really claimed that every-one will be affected by these texts in the same way. Many people have therefore seen the theory as simplistic because it doesn’t take any account of people’s individuality and yet it is still very popular in society particularly for politicians looking for reasons why society has become more violent which can’t be blamed on them. A good example of this is Dumblane- there has never been a real suggestion that Thomas Hamilton watched a lot of violent films but a kind of woolly thinking has allowed newspapers and MPs to link his dreadful crime to video violence.

Another interesting example of the theory in action is the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer. Before every one of his murders, he watched a clip from his favourite film in order to get himself excited. This is the kind of fact that might seem toi prove the hypodermic syringe theory but the film was Star Wars and no-one has ever suggested that that should be banned- clearly the film meant very different things to him to what it means for us.

Key Theory 2: The Culmination Theory

Because of the difficulty of proving the effects of individual media texts on their audience a more refined version of the theory has been created called the culmination mode. According to this, while any one media text does not have too much effect, years and years of watching more violence will make you less sensitive to violence, years and years of watching women being mistreated in soaps will make you less bothered about it in real life.

One difficulty with both of these ways of looking at the media is that they are very difficult to prove either way. Many people have a general sense that the media do affect our behaviour and advertisers certainly justify their fees by working on this assumption, but it can be extraordinarily difficult to actually prove how much effect if any a text might have on an audience. In fact researchers have spent enormous amounts of time and effort trying to prove the validity of the culmination theory with no success- this of course does not mean that there is no truth in it as an idea.

Criticisms of mass audience theory

Some critics of these kinds of theory have argued that the problem is not just with the idea that the media has such obvious effects, but about the assumptions that mass audience theory makes about the members of the audience. Critics of the idea often claim that it is elitist- in other words that it suggests a value judgement about these masses- that they are easily led and not so perceptive and self- aware as the theorists who are analysing them. Here for example is a 1930′s advertising executive talking about the radio audience of his day:

The typical listening audience for a radio program is a tired, bored, middle-aged man and woman whose lives are empty and who have exhausted their sources of outside amusement when they have taken a quick look at an evening paper…. Radio provides a vast source of delight and entertainment for the barren lives of the millions.

The chances are that you have heard similar comments about the viewers of soaps or quiz shows or even that you have made them yourself. The phrase couch potato has this kind of idea behind it- that watching the television is in some way brain numbing compared with other possible forms of entertainment.

One problem that people have suggested with mass audience theory is that it relies on the assumptions of the people analysing the masses. The early theorists who came up with the idea were generally lovers of classical music and hated television and so they tended to look down at the viewers of television who they saw as “the mass.” There is obviously a problem with this if any theory ends up as just being a chance for people to air their prejudices.
To try to make a final judgement about mass audience theory, you really need to carefully question its main assumptions.

Lets look at these in turn. The first idea seems to be suggesting that because we often watch the media independently, it has more chance of affecting us. Certainly many parents think this is true and will make a point of sitting with their young children while they watch potentially disturbing programmes so that they can have some influence on the way the children take in the messages and explain confusing issues, but do you feel adults need to be protected in the same ways? Some of the critics of the idea of the mass audience have pointed out the many ways that individuals who watch programmes alone will then share their experience with others in conversations about what they have seen. One argument is that these kind of conversations have much more influence on potential behaviour than the programme from which they may have sprung.

Key Theory 3: The two step flow

A theory that springs from this idea is called the two step flow. The idea of this is that whatever our experience of the media we will be likely to discuss it with others and if we respect their opinion, the chances are that we will be more likely to be affected by it. (The theory calls these people opinion leaders.)

Further criticisms of mass audience theory

The second major idea of the mass audience theory was that the mass were all watching the same text. This suggests that a single film will be the same for every person who watches it.

We are all individuals with different views and opinions. Our interpretation of a media text is influenced by our individual world view. In other words one viewer might interpret Fatal Attraction as being a sexist film but others have a perfect right to argue an opposite case- they could experience the same text in very different ways- so different, in fact that viewer 1′s Fatal Attraction could almost be another text to the one that viewer 2 saw.

The Mass Market

Before going on to look at some more recent approaches to audiences, it is worth considering one last use of mass audience theory. The idea of the mass market. It wasn’t just academic theorists who were interested in audiences and their relationship with the media texts they encountered. The producers of media texts and the advertisers who used them were if anything even more interested in these audiences who they could contact through the new media. To investigate exactly how large their share of the mass market was, television companies and advertisers pioneered new techniques of market research which involved quantitative surveys where they attempted to count how many people they reached. The most obvious example of this is the system of television ratings which still has enormous effect on the workings of TV stations. You may be able to think of a show that you enjoyed which was taken off because it did not achieve high enough ratings. If so you may agree with the thinking of Todd Gitlin:

The numbers only sample sets tuned in, not necessarily shows watched, let alone grasped, remembered, loved, learned from, deeply anticipated, or mildly tolerated

Quantitative and qualitative research

Many of the people who use mass audience theory tend to back it up with quantitative research. This kind of research is based around counting the number of people who watch certain kinds of programmes and making simple judgements about these quantities. The criticisms of mass audience theory are made equally about quantitative research- that it fails to take into account the differences in peoples’ experiences of the same texts. The opposite of quantitative research is qualitative research. This involves the researchers looking not just at the numbers of people watching a certain programme but also at the ways that they watch it and what they are doing while it is on. The idea of this is that it gives them a clearer idea of what exactly the programme means to its audience and how important it is to them.

We will now examine some theories of audiences which have used qualitative research to look for a more subtle view of the audience and then look at the ways the advertisers and media producers themselves have changed their methods to go beyond the idea of a mass audience.

Key Theory 4: Uses and Gratifications

This is probably the most important theory for you to know. According to uses and gratification theory, we all have different uses for the media and we make choices over what we want to watch. In other words, when we encounter a media text, it is not just some kind of mindless entertainment- we are expecting to get something from it: some kind of gratification.

But what does this actually mean? What kinds of gratification can we be getting? Researchers have found quite a few, but there are four main ones:

Information- we want to find out about society and the world- we want to satisfy our curiosity. This would fit the news and documentaries which both give us a sense that we are learning about the world.
Personal Identity- we may watch the television in order to look for models for our behaviour. So, for example, we may identify with characters that we see in a soap. The characters help us to decide what feel about ourselves and if we agree with their actions and they succeed we feel better about ourselves- think of the warm feeling you get when you favourite character triumphs at the end of a programme.
Integration and Social Interaction- we use the media in order to find out more about the circumstances of other people. Watching a show helps us to empathise and sympathise with the lives of others so that we may even end up thinking of the characters in programme as friends even though we might feel a bit sad admitting it! At the same time television may help us to get on with our real friends as we are able to talk about the media with them.
Entertainment- sometimes we simply use the media for enjoyment, relaxation or just to fill time.
You can probably recognise yourself in some of these descriptions and not surprisingly uses and gratification theory has become quite popular amongst media critics. It is important to remember with this theory that it is likely that with any media text you enjoy, you will be getting a number of Gratifications from it and not just one

However, despite this popularity amongst critics, there have also been criticisms made of some features of the theory. First of all, it ignores the fact that we do not always have complete choice as to what we receive from the media. Think, for example, about your family who may end up having to listen to the same music as you sometimes. Similarly, you don’t have that much choice about the posters that you see on your way to college however objectionable you may find some of them.

A second problem relates to this last example. The poster that you see on a billboard, may be extremely sexist. However, you clearly cannot choose a different poster that you want to see that you might find more pleasant. If you think about it, this problem also affects us in our other encounters with the media- we are generally having to choose the media that we consume from what is available. This undermines the idea of uses and gratifications- we may not all have the same potential to use and enjoy the media products that we want. in society there are in fact plenty of minorities who feel that the media does not provide for them the texts that they want to use.

One of the difficulties of assessing uses and gratifications like this is that people won’t often be aware of the real uses of a text in their lives- how many people would admit for example that they watched a certain program because they were lonely even if that were the truth.

Key Theory 5: Reception analysis

In a sense, this is an extension of uses and gratifications theory. Once you have come up with the idea that people are using the media in different ways, it is just one stage on to actually look in more detail at how this happens. Reception analysis does this and it concentrates on the audience themselves and how they come to a text.

The most important thing about this that you should bear in mind is that reception analysis is based on the idea that no text has one simple meaning. Instead, reception analysis suggests that the audience themselves help to create the meaning of the text. We all decode the texts that we encounter in individual ways which may be a result of our upbringing, the mood that we are in, the place where we are at the time or in fact any combination of these and all kinds of other factors. So viewer 1 may watch a television programme and enjoy every minute of it and viewer 2 may hate the same show. But of course, it goes way beyond just how much we enjoy the text. We will actually create a different meaning for it as well.

Reception analysis is all about trying to look at these kinds of differences and to understand them. What reception analysts have found is that factors such as a gender, our place inside society, and the context of the time we are living in can be enormously important when we make the meaning or a text.
Take the example of a performance by S Club 7 on Top of the Pops. A 12 year old girl watching this may find it very meaningful for her personally – she may feel that the image the group project has important things to say to her about how she might behave. Her father, on the other hand, may create different meanings for the text – he may disapprove of their clothing or behaviour and so the same performance that the girl finds so inspiring may be disgusting to him.

Often when our views of the media differ, it can say as much about us as it does about the media text itself. In this example, the most important factor is probably how S Club 7 trigger off in the two people’s minds ideas that they have about their own lives. The girl may relate to the female members of the group because they are of the same gender as her and because, while they are not the same age as she is, they are probably more like the age she would like to be. For the father, his views of the group are probably influenced by the fact that his daughter likes them so much – the idea that she might want to become like them, may make their performance seem more frightening.

Of course this kind of thing is often closer to psychology- the study of personality- than Media Studies and can be very difficult to research. While quantitative researchers simply count the number of people watching a programme, reception analysts have to make use of interviews in order to get some kind of idea of the meanings that people attach to texts. This can be very time consuming- a simple questionnaire is rarely enough and often the researchers will have to ask quite detailed and spontaneous questions.

The ideas that reception theorists come up with are also not so neat and straightforward as those of other approaches. If you remember, Uses and Gratifications made up a simple list of four types of use for the media. Because reception theory concentrates on the individual it can never do this – we are all different and no one theory can comprehend that.

This can be seen as a strength of the theory – that it takes into account the complexity of our response to the media. At the same time the theory has a weakness which has been pointed out. This will be clearer if we return to our example of S Club 7. The girl’s reaction to the programme may also have been affected by the day that she had had at school – the way that her teacher shouted at her may have made her particularly excited about the idea of being someone else. Similarly, an encounter with a strong woman who he was not keen on, may have affected the father’s reactions to the programme. Reception analysis takes none of this into account it ignores the context of everyday life, something which we will turn to in the final theory concerning audiences.

The media in everyday life.

Uses and gratifications theory looked at why we make use of the media, Reception analysis looked at what we see when we watch a media text- what both of them leave out is the question of how the media fits in with our everyday lives – how do we live with the media?

One researcher who has looked at this is David Morley. He has come up with the idea of the “politics of the living room”- the idea that the media is just part of all the different things that may be going on in your home, that a television can become more than just a form of entertainment but in a typical family can be a subject of argument or a symbol of power. This may be a concept that you will find quite familiar. Imagine a situation where a man comes home from a terrible day at work. He is in a bad mood and does not want to talk to anybody in his family so he switches on the TV. Anyone doing quantitative research would simply see him as the another viewer of whatever programme is on but in fact he is probably barely watching it – the television is simply a way of shutting the rest of the world out. This is one simple example of the media in everyday life – here are some more general principles.
We can never consider one example of the media on its own- we are always choosing from many different alternatives and more confusingly our understanding of one text may be affected by our knowledge of another – to go back to the earlier example the man watching S Club 7 may have read about them in that morning’s Daily Mail.

It is very rare for us to concentrate fully on any media text- we may skim read through a magazine or glance at various different channels while using the remote. Once again, quantitative research cannot cope with this – it simply counts the number of texts encountered but doesn’t consider whether the audience have taken them in.

The media can become an important part of the routines of our lives – you may want to watch Neighbours when you get in from college or listen to the Chart Show every Sunday when you do your homework. In these examples, the exact time and the way that the media text fits in with the pattern of your day are almost as important as what the media text actually is.

It is very rare for us to be completely alone when we encounter a media text. If you think back to the mass audience theorists, they talked about the media audience being isolated like atoms, but in fact, even when you are reading a newspaper, you are often surrounded by other people – even when you are in your room watching the TV, your family are close at hand.

Gender differences

One interesting thing that Morley found in his research was that there were clear differences in the uses that people made of the media in their everyday lives depending on their gender. He found that men tended to prefer factual programmes eg News and sports while women preferred fiction Soaps and other drama series. Also, men preferred watching the programmes extensively while women tended to be doing something else at the same time. Another thing that he found was that if someone had control over what the family was watching, it was more likely to be the man – often with the remote control in his hand.

Of course, this does not necessarily mean that there are fundamental differences between men and women. What it does relate to is the kinds of lives they are often leading – for a man, working during the day outside of the home, television is seen as a form of relaxation. For women, on the other hand, the home is often a place of work and so it is likely that that work will have to continue during the evening’s television as well. Of course, the account given of typical lifestyles of men and women is now becoming quite out of date and so it is very likely that research such as Morley’s, if carried out today, would come up with quite different conclusions.

New ideas about the audience

What you have been reading about up to now are very much the classic ideas about audiences. You need to be familiar with these theories if you are to answer questions in the media studies exam successfully. However, there are other ways of looking at the audience which are a bit stranger, but maybe even more up to date. The rest of this page will cover these weirder ideas.
A lot of what follows deals with the relationship between advertisers and the programmes that you watch on the television. Obviously, the vast majority of the programmes that you watch (with the single exception of those produced by the B.B.C) are made with money raised from advertising but it can be easy to ignore the effect that this might have on what you end up seeing. The theories that follow look at the relationship between advertisers, media producers and audiences in more detail.

Audience Surveillance

While you were reading about Morley’s ideas about the politics of the living room, you may well have thought that it was all very different from your own family life at home. The truth is that the traditional idea of a family sitting down together to watch the same programmes on the TV is very much out of date. Many of you will have your own televisions, stereos and game consoles in your bedrooms. The result of this is that the mass audience is even more divided than ever before. This is a problem for us when we try to analyse the media, but it is even more difficult for the people who produce media texts. It has always been very important for media producers to have some kind of idea about the people who are consuming their texts. This was confusing enough in the old days when they might have been trying to analyse a cinema audience – it is well nigh impossible today.

But advertisers do not give up easily and their need to find out exactly who is consuming what and how is resulting in some new techniques of surveillance. Our media use is being watched more than ever before. One recent example can demonstrate how easy this kind of thing is becoming – your parents may have recently got a loyalty card from the supermarket, the idea of this is not just to give away lots of free goodies, but it also allows the supermarkets to keep an exact track of what you are buying week by week. They can build up a profile of you as a consumer and then, by buying up advertising space in the magazines which they sell and which they can see from your receipts that you buy, target you more directly. As Cable, Satellite and the Internet become more commonplace, this kind of direct individual advertising will become much more common and will affect us all as audiences.

Of course all of this is only possible now because of computers. In the past it might have been feasible to look in detail at the buying behaviour of people, but it would have been impossible to come to any useful conclusions. Today, on the other hand, a simple computer program could be written which would analyse your shopping receipts in detail and then produce a list of suitable adverts which could be sent to you alone during your evening’s T V viewing. This would mean that in the future, you could end up watching the same programme as your friends, but seeing different adverts in the middle of it.

Audiences as products

Audience surveillance in extreme form is probably still a few years away, but something that is very much with us already is the idea of audiences being the products of television companies. This is a strange way of looking at the media – but quite a useful one. It is usual to think of media texts as being made for the audience – so, for example, Match of the Day is a show that has been made for football fans – a group of people who already exists. The idea of the audiences as products theory is that the process works the opposite way round: the media producers will create a text in such a way that it will produce an audience which they can then sell to advertisers.

A good example of how this works is Friends. It might be normal to think of this as just being a funny program that happens to be on on a Friday night. According to the theory, though, Friends is actually a way of selling beauty products. In America where the series started, the producers would have been looking for advertising revenue and so they came up with the idea of a show which would feature beautiful people in funny situations with happy endings. They would have seen this as a great way of selling beauty products as the show would attract an audience of young people who would want to follow the fashions of the main characters particularly as the feel good endings would make this audience want to lead the same lives as the beautifully manicured main characters. To help them to attract this audience they would have scheduled the programme at a time when they could catch these people.

We have been talking about the producers attracting this audience as if the bunch of people who watch the show were already there beforehand as a recognisable group in society, but in fact, by assembling such a group of people to watch the show, in a very real sense they have produced this audience, and the same pattern has been repeated in Britain where the programme was at first sponsored by a hair products manufacturer.

You can probably think of almost any media text in the same way. It is rare today for texts to be created just for fun – much more often, commercial companies are trying to produce a certain audience. This would be fine if we were all as attractive to the advertisers – we would all get the programmes that we want. Unfortunately, some types of people have more money and are therefore more attractive to advertisers- they therefore will get more programmes tailored for them. Strangely enough, as teenagers, you are one of these groups. You may not feel as if you have a lot of money, but as a group, compared to older people who have their money tied up in mortgages and buying essentials, you spend a much higher proportion of your money on consumer products.. This has meant that in recent years, media producers have been bending over backwards in order to try to produce teenage audiences. The most recent example of this has been Channel 5 who have geared a lot of their programmes around the kinds of things they think you are interested in – with not much success so far!

This theory was first thought up by American theorists and does not fit British Television quite so much because of the existence of the BBC. This channel is different because since it was first set up by the government it has been funded by public money in the form of the license fee and therefore does not have the same kind of need to produce specific types of audiences. This allows it to make programmes to attract different kinds of audience who may be left out by other stations and also allows it to follow its stated aim of “informing and entertaining”

However, the BBC is now quite competitive for audiences and so will try to produce similar audiences to ITV which is commercial. The BBC now sells a lot of it programmes abroad, particularly to America and it therefore is in the business of producing audiences in different countries. Many of the famous costume dramas that fill up Sunday afternoons are full of are partly intended to produce a certain kind of audience on American television.

Niche marketing

All of this is happening at the same time as the number of different media products available to us is increasing constantly. So we have a situation where there are more and more media texts and they are being targeted more and more precisely at certain groups. this process can involve something called niche marketing. A niche is a small part of the market and advertisers have found that they can get a greater return on their investment if they produce an audience who although smaller can more easily be targeted. A good example of this is the specialist hobby magazines that you might see in W H Smith’s. There can’t be that many people who are interested in Carp Monthly, but the producers of the magazine can be fairly sure that they will attract a large proportion of them. So although profits will not be large, they will probably be secure. Another good example of this is computer magazines: one company, Future Publishing, produce dozens of different magazines each aimed at one particular niche of computer users – there are magazines for people who use the Internet, for those who are new to computers, or those who are experts and for those who just play games on them. Once again, no single one of these magazines has a large enough niche to make lots of money, but the company has become very successful with all the magazines combined.

All off this might help to explain why programmes with quite high ratings can be inexplicably taken off the air and why at the same time a minority show might flourish. The high rating texts might well have been popular with a part of society with little buying power- for example the elderly, while the niche for the minority show might be much more attractive to the advertisers.

An example of this is the enormous success of the various types of Star Trek over the years. The American producers of these programmes discovered a long time ago that although they did not produce large audiences, the particular niche they attracted included a high proportion of intelligent single men in quite well paid jobs- a niche that was very attractive to advertisers.
The opposite of this can be seen in the case of Hello magazine which has had financial difficulties in the past because of this – although it has produced a large audience, the kinds of people it attracts like the working class and the elderly, are not those that advertisers are interested in.

Audiences as Labour

In a sense this next theory takes things a little bit further. The idea of audiences as Labour is that rather than the media producers working for us when they make shows, we are working for them. The advertisers who put up the money for the programmes that we watch are clearly trying to make money out of us. You could see us, therefore, as working for them by watching their adverts. This might seem even more important, when you think about all the other work that you have been doing during a typical day – after a hard day at college, the last thing that you want is to have to sit through a load of adverts – you simply want to be entertained and the adverts sometimes get in the way of that. In America, the work that audiences have to do in order to be able to watch their favourite programmes has increased as adverts have become more and more frequent. In Britain, you can see this same process in action if you compare satellite television with ITV – the massive amount of advertising on satellite means that you have to work harder for your entertainment.

519. SIGNS, CODES and CONVENTIONS

April 2, 2009 5 comments

MISE-EN-SCENE (French for ‘put in the scene’)

EDITING
Some important edits are called: continuity (or ‘Hollywood’) edits; MTV (’music television’) edits; cross-cuts; follow-cuts; match-cuts; jump cuts; eye-line matches; dissolves; fades; montages; bridging; flashbacks…

SHOT TYPES

Establishing shot / long-shot / mid-shot / close-up / point-of­ view shot / soft-focus…

Semiotics is the name given to the study of the way by which meaning is created in the world, especially in the mass media. It is based upon the Idea of ’signs’ and ‘codes’, ‘denotation’ and ‘connotation’.

A sign is the basic unit of meaning in semiotics. A sign is any individual thing that signifies meaning; for example, your clothes are a group of ‘fashion signs’ which signify meaning (perhaps you are trying to look ‘cool’?). There are two ways that signs create meaning: all signs have a literal meaning, which is called their denotation; but, depending on the context, many signs also suggest other ‘layers’ of meaning, which is called their connotation. For example, an image of a girl dressed all in white denotes just that, I.e. this is what you ’see’; but it may also connote innocence or purity (and all that this means in our society and culture), i.e. this is what you ‘think’.
Connotation, therefore, is always more than the denotation. Signs rarely work alone. They are most often combined with other signs to form a code.

A code is a group of signs that we recognise as going ‘naturally together’ to signify meaning (e.g. a rose is a sign; but being handed to a girl by a boy could create a ‘romance code’ and suggest love).

Film and TV codes are often called technical codes because technical equipment is used to create them.

There are three ways through which codes and signs can signify meaning: Iconicity: an iconic sign or code looks just like the thing it seems to represent, e.g. an image of a cowboy seems to be just that; but it is called iconic because it suggests far more than it should: for example, our culture tends to associate extra meanings with the idea of ‘cowboy’, such as toughness, heroism, masculinity, etc. Iconic signs are never reality: they are a representation of reality.

Indexicality (an indexical sign or code) in a sign directly suggests meaning because what it shows seems to be the result of something we associate with the thing it represents, e.g. smoke suggests fire, sweat suggests exercise, appearance can suggest wealth, etc. This can be a short-cut way for a film director to create meaning.

Symbolism (a symbolic sign or code) suggests meaning because we have learned this meaning in our culture; a symbol, in itself, has no association with what it means, e.g. a red heart shape suggests love; letters combine to make words, etc. The meaning we gain from codes is said to be culturally determined which .means that our culture ‘taught’ us that particular way to interpret the meaning. For example, when we see our national flag, the Union Jack, we see more than what it simply denotes – a piece of coloured cloth: patriotism and pride, etc.

An important code is an enigma code. These codes put a fascinating question in the mind of the audience that only watching the movie will answer. They tempt the audience to watch and are often used in trailers. A convention is simply a way of doing something that we are so used to we usually fail to notice it; conventions can seem ‘perfectly natural’ or ‘realistic’ yet are anything but. So: women in cowboys tend conventionally to be either ‘very good’ or ‘very bad’ – and this seems ‘normal’ within the genre of cowboy movies; the wheels of a car always screech; guns always kill outright; a punch always knocks a person out cold.

Genre and narrative are important media conventions that are covered later, as are editing techniques and-the use of certain shot types (such as an establishing shot sequence or montage – see later).

Cinema and TV codes are created within an area bounded by the edges of a screen. By controlling what objects and action are in this frame, a film director creates what is called a mise-en-scene.

Asking questions such as ‘who, what and where’ of the characters and objects and their relative positions, expressions, appearance, costume, make-up, scenery, props, lighting, sounds, etc. in a mise-en-scene will help you analyse it.

Try to consider what effects are created in a mise-en-scene’, what meaning they have (their denotation and, most importantly, connotation), how they have been created and why they were created (which will be the director’s purpose – perhaps to develop a character, a mood, the storyline or plot and sometimes to explore a deeper meaning or idea, i.e. a theme).

Editing is the placing of separate shots together. This allows a director to manipulate space and time ­hundreds of miles or weeks of time can be reduced to a few scenes that appear perfectly natural and believable to the audience. A montage is a most important editing technique. It is a series of shots that are edited together to create a kind of ‘individual unit’ of meaning.

Continuity edits – especially matched cuts – are called ‘Hollywood editing’. This creates a sequence that seems to flow naturally on from the previous one, and in which the edits are ‘invisible’. These have the effect of creating a realistic and seamless flow to a story or narrative (see below) where one event leads naturally onto the next.

Jump-cuts are dramatic edits; MTV edits are rapid sequences of fast jump cuts used to create a conscious effect as used first in pop-videos;

cross-cuts/parallel editing follow different actions such as two people talking; follow-cuts follow an action to its consequence, e.g. a character looking edits to what they look at

eye-line matches are a kind of follow cut).

A sound-bridge is a sound edit that allows sound from one shot to cross into the next to create continuity.

An establishing shot is usually the opening shot of a sequence; it ’sets the scene’ and locates the action. It is often followed by a mid-shot followed by a close-up shot.

A subjective point-of-view shot (POV) is at eye-level and appears as if you are viewing the scene from the character’s perspective (as in ‘Blair Witch’).

An objective point-of-view shot acts as if you are an observer secretly looking into a scene.

CAMERA ANGLE Eye-line match / high / low

CAMERA MOVEMENT Zooming / tracking / panning / hand-held

LIGHTING High key, neutral, low key

‘DIEGESIS’ AND SOUND

VISUAL EFFECTS / SFX

NARRATIVE

GENRE

ICONOGRAPHY

THE ‘STAR SYSTEM’

REALISM

‘Verisimilitude’

‘Generic verisimilitude’

‘Cultural verisimilitude’

Camera angles can signify meaning, e.g. a subjective POV high angle shot can crate a superior feel. Different camera movements can create significant meaning – a zoom or tracking shot into a close-up of a face can create emotion, a pan across a war scene can suggest violence; POV tracking shots and POV hand-held camera shot can create tension and involvement by making you feel as if you are a part of the action.

Lighting can create atmosphere and mood as well as signify meaning, e.g. in a horror movie, light and shade are important codes of meaning. High-key lighting is harsh; soft-key lighting creates a romantic atmosphere, spotlighting picks out a character from a group, etc.

Diegesis means the ‘world of the film’: if something seems to be a part of the ‘world of the film’, it is called ‘diegetic’. So, sound that is a part of the action is diegetic sound, e.g. wind noise, screeching cars, etc; but sound that is added’ to create, most often, mood or atmosphere is called non-diegetic sound. Diegetic sounds may also be added in after filming, or may be exaggerated for effect (e.g. loud footsteps).

SFX (special effects’) often use computer-generated graphics to create compelling realism and meaning.

The use of a narrative structure is a major convention of cinema and TV. We are all immersed in narratives and have been since childhood as we tell of or hear about the complex events of the world not in the form of long-winded complex details or bald information but as absorbing and interesting stories. Yet this way of explaining real as opposed to fictional events greatly oversimplifies reality whilst at the same time; paradoxically, appearing very realistic and believable. For instance, real events are rarely clearly ‘connected’ by such simple ’cause and effect’ relationships as in stories (i.e. this leads to that because…). Yet in narrative they always are. And in the real world people are not either good (i.e. ‘heroes’) or evil (i.e. ‘villains’); but in narrative they always are to some degree at least. And so on. For better or worse, we tell and hear of world events as narratives and media producers know this and use it to create media texts that rely on narrative structures and forms to be absorbing, compelling and convincingly realistic. Because of this, filmed narratives can easily trick us into thinking we are viewing a real ‘window on the world’.

Genre means the type/kind of narrative being told, e.g. detective, sci-fi, horror, etc. Genre defines a text by its similarities to other texts. Importantly, when we watch a genre film we have many pre-existing expectations of the types of characters, setting and events we want to see (prediction is a major aspect of our enjoyment of a film, and genre helps this). Genre conventions are an important way a director can create believable ‘versions of reality’ because we fail to see that what is shown is not reality at, all, but a media convention that we have become accustomed to seeing in that kind of film. So… we don’t mind the owner of a casino being horribly killed because we see him, in the gangster genre as naturally a ‘villain’. Film companies use genre to sell and make films: a popular genre creates a greater chance of commercial success; and genre can be cost effective, making it cheaper to write new stories and reducing the need for entirely new sets. Iconography is an important aspect of genre. We come to expect to see certain objects within the mise-en­-scene of a particular genre, for example, in a Western, we expect to see dusty lonely roads, saloon bars, cowboy hats and horses, jails, sheriffs badges, etc.; in a modern horror film, we expect lonely girls, ‘normal’ objects, use of dark and light, etc. These ‘genre indicators’ are called the iconography of the genre. Celebrities and film stars are an important part of the iconography of cinema and TV.

Different stars can be important signifiers of meaning. They can create expectations of character and action, help identify genre, and create powerful iconic representation of such as masculinity and femininity. Cinema and TV are able to offer high levels of ‘realism’: the bright screen, the clear and powerful Dolby sound, darkened room, etc. are highly compelling and persuasive. Such ‘appearance of reality’ is given the odd name of verisimilitude. This is yet another convention of course – there is nothing ‘realistic’ about an image on a flat screen.

There are two kinds of verisimilitude: generic verisimilitude is the ‘realism’ that convinces us because of the genre we are watching (in the horror genres it seems highly realistic for a vampire to sink his teeth into a person’s neck); cultural verisimilitude is the kind of reality that convinces us because it looks like the way things are or should

515. Critical Research Study Checklist

UNIT 2734 – CRITICAL RESEARCH TASK LIST. STUDENT NAME_____________________

DATE STAGE STUDENT ACTION
Identification of topic area from OCR menu 1.Based on teacher information, choose topic area to work within.
Initial Hypothesis 1. Based on teacher information,

choose a hypothesis as a focus for initial research

Initial Research 1.Students submit initial research file of at least 12 articles, with contents page, notes and bibliography2.Students book a tutorial slot for feedback on research and discussion of key ideas, aims, approaches
Development of Hypothesis 1. 1.Based on tutorial feedback, students revise hypothesis with appropriate/original/interesting hypothesis2.
.

Literature Review

1.Students gather range of secondary sources, based upon revised hypothesis2.Added to research file with contents page, notes on sources and bibliography3.Students book a tutorial slot for feedback
Identification of Primary Texts 1.Students gather range of textual sources, identify key sequences, articles etc and carry out close textual analysis2.Added to research file with contents page, notes on sources and bibliography3.Students book a tutorial slot for feedback


INDEPENDENT RESEARCH STUDY

DATE
Primary Research methods-questionnaires, focus group, observation, experiment 1. Students choose at least two primary research processes, as appropriate to their research task and carry out2. Students evaluate results and process and add to research file
Primary Research methods – structured and unstructured interviews 1. Students carry out at least one relevant interview, as appropriate to their research task2. Students evaluate results and process and add to research file3. Students book a tutorial slot for feedback
Q2 – Creating an argument 1. Write up research material in response to Q2.2. Revise research material and its articulation in response to essay feedback
Q1 – Evaluating the research process 3. Write up evaluation of research material in response to Q14. Revise research material and its evaluation in response to essay feedback5.

Notes for the exam

1. Based on teacher information, students prepare 4 x A4 pages of notes2. Show to teacher for checking
Mock exam 1. Sit mock exam2. Revise research material, its evaluation and notes in light of teacher feedback
External exam 1. Fill in OCR coversheet and attach to revised notes2. Give to teacher to be signed3. Retain for examination

514. Magazine and gender – AS Media and Georgia L

Notes on ‘The Gaze’

 

Daniel Chandler

 

Laura Mulvey on film spectatorship

 

Whilst these notes are concerned more generally with ‘the gaze’ in the mass media, the term originates in film theory and a brief discussion of its use in film theory is appropriate here.

 

 As Jonathan Schroeder notes, ‘Film has been called an instrument of the male gaze, producing representations of women, the good life, and sexual fantasy from a male point of view’ (Schroeder 1998, 208). The concept derives from a seminal article called ‘Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema’ by Laura Mulvey, a feminist film theorist. It was published in 1975 and is one of the most widely cited and anthologized (though certainly not one of the most accessible) articles in the whole of contemporary film theory.

 

 Laura Mulvey did not undertake empirical studies of actual filmgoers, but declared her intention to make ‘political use’ of Freudian psychoanalytic theory (in a version influenced by Jacques Lacan) in a study of cinematic spectatorship. Such psychoanalytically-inspired studies of ‘spectatorship’ focus on how ‘subject positions’ are constructed by media texts rather than investigating the viewing practices of individuals in specific social contexts. Mulvey notes that Freud had referred to (infantile) scopophilia – the pleasure involved in looking at other people’s bodies as (particularly, erotic) objects. In the darkness of the cinema auditorium it is notable that one may look without being seen either by those on screen by other members of the audience. Mulvey argues that various features of cinema viewing conditions facilitate for the viewer both the voyeuristic process of objectification of female characters and also the narcissistic process of identification with an ‘ideal ego’ seen on the screen. She declares that in patriarchal society ‘pleasure in looking has been split between active/male and passive/female’ (Mulvey 1992, 27). This is reflected in the dominant forms of cinema. Conventional narrative films in the ‘classical’ Hollywood tradition not only typically focus on a male protagonist in the narrative but also assume a male spectator. ‘As the spectator identifies with the main male protagonist, he projects his look onto that of his like, his screen surrogate, so that the power of the male protagonist as he controls events coincides with the active power of the erotic look, both giving a satisfying sense of omnipotence’ (ibid., 28). Traditional films present men as active, controlling subjects and treat women as passive objects of desire for men in both the story and in the audience, and do not allow women to be desiring sexual subjects in their own right. Such films objectify women in relation to ‘the controlling male gaze’ (ibid., 33), presenting ‘woman as image’ (or ‘spectacle’) and man as ‘bearer of the look’ (ibid., 27). Men do the looking; women are there to be looked at. The cinematic codes of popular films ‘are obsessively subordinated to the neurotic needs of the male ego’ (ibid., 33). It was Mulvey who coined the term ‘the male gaze’.

 

 Mulvey distinguishes between two modes of looking for the film spectator: voyeuristic and fetishistic, which she presents in Freudian terms as responses to male ‘castration anxiety’. Voyeuristic looking involves a controlling gaze and Mulvey argues that this has has associations with sadism: ‘pleasure lies in ascertaining guilt – asserting control and subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness’ (Mulvey 1992, 29). Fetishistic looking, in contrast, involves ‘the substitution of a fetish object or turning the represented figure itself into a fetish so that it becomes reassuring rather than dangerous. This builds up the physical beauty of the object, transforming it into something satisfying in itself. The erotic instinct is focused on the look alone’. Fetishistic looking, she suggests, leads to overvaluation of the female image and to the cult of the female movie star. Mulvey argues that the film spectator oscillates between these two forms of looking (ibid.; see also Neale 1992, 283ff; Ellis 1982, 45ff; Macdonald 1995, 26ff; Lapsley & Westlake 1988, 77-9).

 

 This article generated considerable controversy amongst film theorists. Many objected to the fixity of the alignment of passivity with femininity and activity with masculinity and to a failure to account for the female spectator. A key objection underlying many critical responses has been that Mulvey’s argument in this paper was (or seemed to be) essentialist: that is, it tended to treat both spectatorship and maleness as homogeneous essences – as if there were only one kind of spectator (male) and one kind of masculinity (heterosexual). E Ann Kaplan (1983) asked ‘Is the gaze male?’. Both Kaplan and Kaja Silverman (1980) argued that the gaze could be adopted by both male and female subjects: the male is not always the controlling subject nor is the female always the passive object. We can ‘read against the grain’. Teresa de Lauretis (1984) argued that the female spectator does not simply adopt a masculine reading position but is always involved in a ‘double-identification’ with both the passive and active subject positions. Jackie Stacey asks: ‘Do women necessarily take up a feminine and men a masculine spectator position?’ (Stacey 1992, 245). Indeed, are there only unitary ‘masculine’ or ‘feminine’ reading positions? What of gay spectators? Steve Neale (1983) identifies the gaze of mainstream cinema in the Hollywood tradition as not only male but also heterosexual. He observes a voyeuristic and fetishistic gaze directed by some male characters at other male characters within the text (Stacey notes the erotic exchange of looks between women within certain texts). A useful account of ‘queer viewing’ is given by Caroline Evans and Lorraine Gamman (1995). Neale argues that ‘in a heterosexual and patriarchal society the male body cannot be marked explictly as the erotic object of another male look: that look must be motivated, its erotic component repressed’ (Neale 1992, 281). Both Neale and Richard Dyer (1982) also challenged the idea that the male is never sexually objectified in mainstream cinema and argued that the male is not always the looker in control of the gaze. It is widely noted that since the 1980s there has been an increasing display and sexualisation of the male body in mainstream cinema and television and in advertising (Moore 1987, Evans & Gamman 1995, Mort 1996, Edwards 1997).

 

 Gender is not the only important factor in determining what Jane Gaines calls ‘looking relations’ – race and class are also key factors (Lutz & Collins 1994, 365; Gaines 1988; de Lauretis 1987; Tagg 1988; Traube 1992). Ethnicity was found to be a key factor in differentiating amongst different groups of women viewers in a study of Women Viewing Violence (Schlesinger et al. 1992). Michel Foucault, who linked knowledge with power, related the ‘inspecting gaze’ to power rather than to gender in his discussion of surveillance (Foucault 1977).

 

MORE ABOUT  MORE!: THE SEXUAL LANGUAGE OF YOUNG WOMEN’S MAGAZINES

 

On this page (by David Gauntlett) we consider whether the sexual freedom and assertiveness encouraged by magazines like More (and its sisters, like Cosmopolitan and Glamour) is a good thing for young women – basically, I argue that it is – and then we see what some actual teenagers think about this, via the results of some brand new qualitative research conducted over the internet.

 

More is a British magazine aimed at older teenagers and twentysomething women, although it is also enjoyed by younger teenagers eager to read a more ‘grown up’ magazine. International viewers might think of an even more youthful and zesty version of Cosmopolitan, with even more emphasis on sex and enthusiastic discussion of how you can make men submit to your sexual will.

 

The content of More is a clear-cut positive rejection of the stuffy old conservatism about sexual matters that was around 10 or 20 years ago. It is emphatically post-traditonal – or, indeed, anti-traditional (in terms of its exuberant celebration of female desire). Like other ‘girl power’ texts, it emphasises that women should be able to get what they want from men, when they want it; that men should not dictate the terms of a relationship; that a woman has the right to look and dress however she likes, for her own pleasure; and that a woman has the right to demand satisfaction in sex, in work, and in every other area of life.

 

Of course, there are some problems with this recipe. It is emphatically heterosexual (in a way that is not really undermined by the occasional feature on the joys of lesbianism). Some people complain that the magazines reduce women to sex-obsessed predators, and objectify men as ‘eye candy’ – but this is a blatant reversal of the traditional ‘male gaze’, and remains powerful politically. Also, like all women’s magazines (and to a lesser extent, men’s magazines) they may promote an ideal of attractiveness which readers may be unable or unwilling to attain.

 

Angela McRobbie has argued that feminists should not dismiss magazines such as More out of hand. She admits that such magazines may not exactly reflect feminist ideals, but points out that, as far as many young women are concerned, academic feminism is part of the world of middle-aged authority figures – and we cannot really expect young people to simply ‘do what they are told’ by the establishment. Nevertheless, McRobbie says that ‘feminism exists as a productive tension’ in the magazines. More and  Cosmo do promote the kinds of confidence, self-awareness and assertiveness that feminism was always calling for: woman are encouraged to know their own bodies and their needs, to articulate what they want, and to make well-informed decisions based on their own interests and desires, and not what other people want them to do. As I say in Media, Gender and Identity (2002):

 

In the magazines for older teenagers and young women, the encouragement of women to be sexual actors – even predators – rather than sexual objects or victims, reflects a ‘feminist’ turning of the tables. Feminists never really suggested that having sex with lots of men was a goal in itself, but the rejection of passive femininity, and the  freedom to openly desire others, is feminist progress.

 

So that’s one view, but really we need to check it out by talking to actual teenagers. To that end, I spent a lot of time on internet message boards for teenagers, such as Teenfront.co.uk, sending messages and emails to young people from the UK and further afield. (Being a 30 year old man hanging out on teen websites for research purposes raises ethical concerns, of course – I was always careful to say who I was, what I was doing, and reminding teenagers not to disclose their address or other personal details to anyone on the net).

 

Most of the young women liked More‘s openness about sexual matters:

 

I get every issue of More magazine and I think it is good that they talk about sex in the way that they do. I think that More is aimed at people in their late teens (e.g. 15/16 to early twenties or older) so the majority of these people are probably sexually active and the information they give you is good for these types of people. I am 16 and have been getting More for about a year now, before that I got Bliss magazine but I felt that I was growing out of it a bit. I still buy other mags too though like Bliss and J17. I personally think that if someone is reading More magazine and their parents are not happy with the content, they should not let them buy More magazine. But I think that More has a lot of information to offer about sex, and young people need educating about the facts, the more information you have the more you are going to know. Magazines are another source of information. My mum said she did disapprove at first of me reading More magazine because of the men on the centre pages and the sex position of the fortnight etc, but she was just finding it hard to believe that I was growing up – she still let me read it though. I don’t think my mum has any problem with me reading it now though. So basically I think that More is good for the right age group.

 

(Sarah, age 16, UK)

 

I think they should have a bit about sex in them, because some people don’t know properly about sex and stuff, but are too embarrassed to ask at home about it, but if they see it in a mag it might help them a bit… But if there’s too much it does get boring.

 

(Angie, 16, UK)

 

I think it’s good that magazines discuss sex… I’m 17, and I think it would be unrealistic to expect a magazine aimed at my age group not to discuss sex, as it’s already ‘part of our lives’ if you know what I mean. Personally, I think that sex being discussed in magazines makes me feel more confident, as the stuff you read in magazines is probably more reliable that the stuff people tell you, and so, if you know facts about getting pregnant or whatever, you are more likely to make ‘informed choices’ about sex etc.

 

(Clare, 17, UK)

 

Some responses made direct and indirect reference to changing gender roles and historical taboos:

 

I agree that with magazines discussing sex help us teens realise not only that we have to be careful, but I think it has made me more confident. With girl power and all, it has changed the roles a lot – not long ago the men were the bread winners and the women stayed at home looking after the children. Now it has all changed, a lot of women are the main money bringers, which would have seemed odd, back then.

 

(Charlie, 16, UK)

 

It’s good that magazines write about sex and boys. You learn so much, and it’s pretty interesting too. Boys are still ahead of us girls with lust and stuff. If a girl has sex with some guys, people call her a slut, and if a boy does the same thing people consider him cool. It’s not totally equal, yet. But I hope it will be some day. In relationships it’s more equal, I guess. I think it’s great that magazines brings the ‘girl power-message’. It makes you feel more confident, and it helps you 2 stand up for your rights as a girl!

 

(Camilla, 13, Sweden)

 

I reckon its great about equality, that something I feel strongly about everyone should be equal. however, I do think that sex is still a bit of a taboo subject hence all the teenage pregnancies. I think nowadays it is more open but not completely. in relationships girls are being the more dominant role and I reckon thats great we should all have a chance, but I think it tends to be the boys with the more dominant role.

 

(Kate, 16, UK)

 

This woman was supportive of sex coverage in general, so that readers would be well informed, but raised concerns about the tone of the writing:

 

I think it’s good that sex can be discussed in magazines as other types of media are a lot less willing to do it. However, More is slightly worrying as it focuses on the sex itself rather than the emotion, like younger mags (e.g. J17), and it only carries a small thing at the bottom of the page about contraception. If we’ve got one of the highest pregnancy rates then why aren’t mags constantly promoting ‘safe’ rather than ‘fun’ sex? Kids need to be clued up and with the prudish society we live in, mags are sometimes the easiest way to get it. As long as the content is aimed at the audience and is informative, I see no problem whatsoever. In my opinion, if parents aren’t willing to talk openly to their children about sex then they’re in no position to criticise mags that give them the information they need.

 

(Jane, 17, UK)

 

Others were less certain that a lot of material about sex was a good idea:

 

I think that you should have not too much about sex, but you should have some of it but just the right amount, as if there’s too much it gets really boring.

 

(Holly, 15, UK)

 

And some found the repetitive emphasis on sex rather oppressive:

 

I’m a virgin and don’t really understand what the point in underage sex is to be honest! I think I’d want to have sex when I’m settled with someone I love, not just to lose my virginity. … I think mags inform people about safe sex and I agree that all these ‘Sleeping with my best mate’s boyfriend’ stories are quite funny.

 

(Claire, 14, UK)

 

More! is not really a ‘teenage’ magazine of the same category as stuff like Bliss, Sugar,  J17 etc. I’m 17, and so technically still a teenager, and it’s one of the ones we most read now. Some of my friends actually keep the ‘position of the fortnight’ bits, either for current use with their boyfriends, or for future ideas! I think it aims to make women feel more powerful about sex, like they’re in control etc, which is a good thing. As a 17 year old who is still a virgin, however, I do sometimes get a bit depressed by it. I find the ‘younger’ mags I’ve mentioned before too immature for me, but reading about all these people and their various romps does sometimes make me think ‘what’s wrong with me, why aren’t I doing this?’ The paradox is that I tell myself I’m happy being a virgin, that in the end it’ll be worth it, and anyway, it’s not like there’s been any great opportunity for me to lose it. But sometimes it seems to be implying that what goes on in their stories etc is ‘normal’ and a positive thing to be encouraging, and that those of us who aren’t doing it are missing out. The publishers will probably argue that it isn’t aimed at our age group, it’s meant for a bit older, but everyone reads it, and so is influenced by it.

 

(Helenia, 17, UK)

 

I’m 14 and even though I don’t often read magazines like that, when I do I find it annoying. It seems to put pressure on teens to have sex, which I think is stupid.

 

(Louise, 14, UK)

 

Overall, then, teenagers were well able to think critically about the magazines. Although some young and not-quite-so-young readers found the repeated sex themes to be rather claustrophobic, most readers recognised that they were  useful in information terms, and also somewhat empowering, particularly when considered in contrast with gender roles and attitudes of the past.

 

Of course, it could be argued that teenagers themselves are not best qualified to say what they should and should not be reading – shouldn’t that be left to psychologists, teachers, politicians, social scientists? Well, maybe these authority figures can make a contribution, but we have seen (here and elsewhere) that young people are relatively cautious and sensible about their media choices – even surprisingly conservative at times.

 

The self-assured ‘girl power’ messages of magazines like More give young women a language of empowerment and self-fulfillment which is a vibrant element to stir into the mix of influences that teenagers face every day. This only makes sense within certain limits, of course – sexual power is not the same as power in other arenas, such as the workplace, and an emphasis on sexuality is often (though not necessarily) linked to certain notions of glamour and beauty. Nevertheless, the positive, confident message of magazines like More is surely a refreshing change from the subservient feminine lifestyle models of the past.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

508. AS Media Task for After Easter

504. OCR Media Studies – Past papers link

March 29, 2009 Leave a comment

click here

489. 2734 Crit research link from OCR

March 22, 2009 Leave a comment

488. Critical Research Exam: Some guidance on part 1

March 22, 2009 4 comments

Generally then according to last years exam report:

All responses should deal with these 7 questions (you could use this almost as an essay plan). Think to yourself after writing you answer out “does it answer all these points?”

1. Has the candidate considered both Primary and Secondary research methods
2. What primary methods have been considered? (at least 4)
3. What secondary methods have been considered? (at least 5)
4. Are the sources acknowledged / referenced?
5. Has the nature of research been explained? (e.g logistics)
6. Is there reflection upon and evaluation of the methods used ?
7. Is there clear evaluation of the sources themselves?

462. Media terms for revision

February 28, 2009 2 comments

460. Women and horror

February 28, 2009 4 comments
This site offers some insight into important feminist theories around Women and Horror films including Carol Clover’s exploration of representations of women in Horror. You should be making reference to these theories if you want the A-C grades! 

Another theory based site this time drawing upon the work of feminist theorist Laura Mulvey

http://www.helium.com/items/132886-women-in-horror-films-ripley-the-alien-and-the-monstrous-feminine



Top 25 Women of Horror – useful maybe

388. Bafta stuffta

October 6, 2008 Leave a comment

http://www.bafta.org/

383. Hmm film studies for free – check this site’s links!

October 2, 2008 Leave a comment

367. Essential listening – new media

September 27, 2008 Leave a comment

356. Free online Research

September 15, 2008 Leave a comment

355. Online Survey machine

September 15, 2008 1 comment

http://www.surveymonkey.com/

337. A2: CRITICAL RESEARCH STUDY: TOPICS

August 26, 2008 2 comments

From Syllabus

 

5.5.1 Set Topic Content

The content below represents what candidates should investigate within the scope of each topic and is also provided as the source of the questions in the examination papers.

 

Assessment objective 6 (AO6) highlights the emphasis on investigative techniques and independent research and analysis in their chosen topic. It should be clear from the candidates’ examination script that there is ample evidence of individual study and independent research, rather than of answers coached by the Teacher. As such, this unit offers the candidate an excellent opportunity for learning progression to higher education degree-level study.

 

It is important that candidates understand that the nature of this unit is one of active research rather than media text-based analysis.

 

(a) Women and Film

Research into the relationships between female filmmakers and the industry, as well as between their films and their spectators and/or female spectatorship of film.

[Filmmaker is here defined as director, actor, producer, screenwriter or other personnel, for example editor, production designer, director of photography]

 

Gender issues such as equality of opportunity for women filmmakers in the industry; issues of gender representation in films; feminist critical perspectives; popular criticism; audience reception.

 

Candidates may draw on examples of films classed as ‘feminist’, films made for female audiences and films made by women as well as female responses to other films.

[You probably need to be female, and certainly need to have a feminist or pro‑female attitude; could match with Sociology.]

 


(b) Popular Music and Youth Culture

Research into the relationships between popular contemporary music and youth culture.

 

The nature of youth and sub-cultures and their relationship to mainstream popular culture; the relationship between music industry and other industries, for example, fashion, film, television, video, live performance, Internet, newspaper/magazine publishing; issues of ideology and representation of youth culture and young people. Candidates may consider historical changes to popular and academic responses to ‘youth culture’ as a phenomenon.

[Could match with Music & with Sociology]

 

(c) Politics and the Media

Research into the relationships between the political system and the media.

 

Contemporary British politics only, but candidates may compare the relationship between government and media in the UK and other nations. The media as a tool of democracy, public service broadcasting; impartiality versus editorial/owners values; party political broadcasts, campaigns, photo-opportunities and lobbying; government press secretaries, public relations managers, spin doctors and the media; media commentators; the relationship between media owners and government legislation.

[You need an interest in Politics – start collecting material now! Could match with Government & Politics or Sociology.]

 


(d) Children and Television

Research into the relationships between children as subjects of media representation and as consumers of television.

[Broadcast on British television only, which may include programmes made elsewhere for British consumption]

 

Children’s television genres; advertising targeting, and using, children; representations of childhood and gender; academic perspectives; television as education; research on the effects of television on children; children as participants in television programmes; views of parents, teachers and children themselves on television and childhood; effects debate, violence and theoretical models

[You need access to a group (even if small) of children. Could match with Psychology or Sociology.]

 

(e) Sport and the Media

Research into the relationship between sports agencies and the media.

[British media only, but international sporting agencies may be investigated]

 

Relationship between media conglomerates and sport agencies; attraction, retention of audiences via sport in order to promote other products; the representation of ideology such as global unity/competition, nation, gender, competition); proliferation of sports covered including minority interest sports; the media as sports watchdogs and commentators; as source of inter-media competition; sport and advertising/sponsorship, use of new technologies in sports coverage.

[Need to plan now for major competitions or to plot progress during season. Could match PE.]

 


(f) Concept to Consumption

Research into the processes involved in the production of a media text from its conception to consumption.

[Media products from Europe, USA or other countries]

 

A case study investigation into the making of a media product (in any medium), including the initial concept, planning, personnel, technology, facilities, time scale, finance, marketing, distribution and exchange. Candidates will need to understand the institutional contexts for production and distribution and the definitions of ‘successful’ reception by audiences.

[You will need access to an actual media product in the course of development through 2004‑2005, or a media product where detailed information on the stages of its pre-production and production are available – has worked very well with some films – but adding your own research across a range of sources to DVD extras! Could match with Business Studies]

 

(g) Community Radio

The relationships between radio stations and their communities.

[British local radio stations, commercial or publicly funded, or niche radio programmes]

 

Functions and roles of community radio, including public service broadcasting and local radio (public and/or commercial); the needs of community/community identity; public access; community radio as balance for London-centric broadcasting hegemony. Candidates are encouraged to use a specific example of community radio as a case study.

[You will need access to a local or community radio station.]

 

(h) Crime and the Media

The representation of crime in/across a range of media

[British media only]

 

UK crime films; UK television crime series; True-Crime magazines; press representations of crime and criminality; news reporting of crime; radio and internet crime coverage.

[Could match with Sociology, Psychology, Law or Government and Politics]

 


5.5.2 Additional Information

 

The unit has two questions, which address the two categories below, and candidates should address the following aspects, as appropriate to their chosen topic, in the course of their independent study:

Research (Question 1)

Accounts of the kinds of research undertaken, to include the following:

·        the producers, institution or industry concerned

·        academic criticism

·        popular criticism

·        audience reception, including the candidate her/himself (primary research)

 

Analysis and Presentation (Question 2)

Analysis and presentation of the research undertaken, to include the following:

·        the investigative process and the findings of the research;

·        the creation and development of an argument or thesis, with reference to research and textual evidence, where appropriate;

·        conclusions.

 

Guidance on Supervision of Independent Research by Teacher

 

The following kinds of research sources may be used:

Primary Research

·        audience reception research (focus groups, work experience, interviews, industry visits);

·        candidates’ own textual analysis and own critical responses/theses.

 

Secondary Research

·        use of books/study guides and other library resources, such as newspapers, magazines, journals, video/DVD/television resources, existing research studies;

·        industry, academic and other related web sites etc.

 

Centres are encouraged to support their candidates by providing a structure for the Critical Research Study, as it is not considered helpful to leave candidates entirely isolated from teacher support, advice and supervision. It is up to the Centre to decide how to supervise the candidate’s progress, either in and/or outside class time and how much class time to devote to it.

 

To that end, it is recommended that Centres produce a programme of study for candidates, which stipulates interim deadlines for completion of the work at specific stages. In this way, candidates will not be intimidated by the prospect of having to do everything at once. It must be made clear to them, in the support and guidance offered by the Centre, for example, in tutorials, when, where and how to start the Critical Research Study.

 

It should be remembered, by both Centres and candidates, that Unit 2734 is not a text‑based unit. Any references to, and analysis of, media texts will be to provide detailed evidence and examples of the points raised by the candidate in relation to his/her chosen topic, and are not appropriate in their own right in the context of the active nature of the research required. Unless conditions are stipulated in the set topic content, candidates are free to choose media texts from any sources, but should restrict the number of texts to keep the scope of their study manageable.

 

Guidance on Candidates’ Notes

Candidates are able to take 4 sides of A4 research notes into the examination; these must be submitted with the candidate’s examination script. The purpose of these notes is to serve as an aide memoire for the candidate, for detailed information, as below. The notes, which must be hand-written by the candidate him/herself, should cover primary and secondary research sources, statistics, brief quotations, diagrams and note‑form summaries. They should not contain essay plans or continuous prose.

 

On no account should additional sheets or materials be brought into the examination room, nor should the research notes be word-processed, printed, photocopied or typewritten.

 

It is recommended that candidates collect their research findings carefully during the course of their Critical Research Study, which should then be selected and edited carefully at a reasonable point in the period before the examination and presented as the final four sides of research notes.

324. How to make notes for Critical Research Study

August 25, 2008 Leave a comment

NOTE- MAKING

 

Remember the notes you make will form the basis of your preparation and revision for examination (including the 4 sides of notes for the Critical Research Study). It is vital that your notes are clear and enable you to remember what the purpose of the notes was.

 

GENERAL POINTS

 

Record the author, book title, publication date rand edition.

Identify the type of source and reason for using it.

 

Use abbreviations and a shorthand form that you will understand later!

Use clear headings and sub-headings

Use numbers and letters to list ideas in order or for priority.

Use bullet points to list ideas of equal importance

Date and number your pages of notes to make it easier to understand them later.

Do not write in full sentences

Summarise points in your own words (use a quotation if you want to keep the wording)

Pick out key words and phrases

Pick out relevant, brief quotations

Highlight or underline key points in the-text

Note the page numbers of the source from which you take the notes

 

Finally – read through your notes and…

 

Make bullet point summaries of the key points relevant to your research.

Use colour to pick out important ideas or to link related information.

 

Clarity and organisation are essential. Ideas and arguments should be built into your notes as much as possible so that the information you have makes sense in terms of the your investigation.

 

 

LINEAR NOTES

 

The most common form of note-making (though not necessarily the best for your particular purposes). They are generally hand-written on lined paper .

 

            Don’t fill the whole line, and don’t write on every line .

            Aim to leave a lot of white space on the page .

            Leave a margin on the right to add in notes I thoughts later .

            Choose headings that help you remember the information .

            Use sub-headings, sub-points to give more detail (number re- priorities) .

            Use non-written signs – colour, arrows, diagrams, bullet points, underlining to . visually clarify your notes

323. Critical research in five easy steps

August 24, 2008 Leave a comment

All A2 Media Studies students have to undertake an independent research study. And as if that wasn’t hard enough, OCR students have to write it up in exam conditions too. Jean Welsh, of Hills Road Sixth Form Centre, has teamed up with two students who successfully survived the ordeal, to prove it can be done.The Critical Research unit is a different type of exam: you have the opportunity to research a topic you have chosen, to compile your own findings and to write about those findings and your research methods in a two hour exam. You even get to take in four sides of notes from your research to help you do this! It all sounds very easy, and it can be; but you need to make sure you plan your project carefully and cover the relevant material. The following advice draws on the comments and suggestions of two students who successfully completed this unit last year.

Dan Fisher’s approach
Dan chose to do the ‘Popular Music and Youth Culture’ option.

When approaching this part of the course the first thing to do is to make sure that you choose a subject you are interested in. If the subject matter doesn’t inspire you, then you won’t be motivated to put in the extra work to ensure a high grade. This can either be the easiest or most difficult exam you will have to do, so I would suggest making it the former by putting in the effort!

Do …
• choose a topic which interests you
• manage your time carefully
• use a wide range of sources
• utilise questionnaires efficiently
• structure your answer around your main findings.

Don’t …
• assume all sources are credible
• restrict yourself to one source of information (e.g. only the Internet)
• repeat evidence in the same question (looks like you don’t have enough!).

Susie Webb’s approach
Susie chose to do the ‘Women and Film’ topic.

I found this project both interesting and entertaining. As well as learning a great deal about women and film, I thoroughly enjoyed the challenge the piece presented me with. Initially, with such a wide range of topics to chose from, including film, television and music-based topics, my first task was deciding on film and developing a question relating to the topic of ‘Women and Film’ which would give me enough scope to answer both questions sufficiently and give an opportunity to show knowledge, as well as research skills. Apart from a few problems I found the research very stimulating and fun. I liked the fact that for a change, I was actually teaching myself, and this made me eager to persist and find out more. It was enjoyable to take on a big task like this and I learnt a great deal about the topic of ‘Women and Film’.

– It’s important to choose a topic which is open to a lot of research, as well as ensuring that what you choose allows you to explore certain areas further as you progress. However, it is important to choose a topic that is neither too narrow nor too broad.
– Make sure that the you choose a topic or title question you already have an interest in so that you won’t get bored of it and will have the opportunity to show off some knowledge. And you may actually already have some helpful sources at home.

So, following Dan and Susie’s suggestions, we suggest the following five steps to help you organise your project.

Step one: find a focus
Once you’ve chosen your topic, identify a question you want to try and answer. Choose a case study which narrows this down still further. For example:

Option: Children and Television
Question: How are very young children affected by their television viewing?
Case study: 2-3 year-olds watching Teletubbies and The Tweenies.

Option: Women and Film
Question: What is the relationship between female directors, representations of women in film and female audiences?
Case study: The films of Kathryn Bigelow, and female audiences’ reactions to the representations of women in them.
Dan: ‘You need to think about your topic question. This should be both quite specific but also have scope to be researched in depth. The next thing to do once you have planned out the areas is research within the unifying question, create a time plan and break the areas into sizeable chunks.’

Step two: Plan for your research
Break the research process down into:
• specific questions you need to answer
• specific stages
• specific tasks to do
• a time-table for yourself.
What information are you going to need in order to answer your question? How are you going to find it out? Here’s one way of breaking down the ‘Children and Television’ option.

• Identify a small group of children you could study. Talk to their parents about the nature of the research and ask their permission to carry it out.
• Find out what programmes small children watch (focus group talk with parents and/or questionnaire for parents).
• How do small children respond to television? (With parents permission observe a group of children watching and make notes on their reactions.)
• Are there any other studies of small children watching television? (Internet, books.)
• Have I covered any theories on the course which might help my understanding? (Audience theories? Research into other media theories?)

It is important that you cover a range of types of research: primary research (focus groups, questionnaires, your own analysis of programmes/films, working out your own statistics about types of programme/films); secondary research (notes from books, magazines, websites – try and use a wide range of materials, both academic and popular).

Dan: ‘Make sure you have been as objective as possible by using information from a wide range of sources including the Internet, books, newspapers, periodicals, etc.

It is important to consider whether your sources are biased because you can write about this in your answer to question one.
When conducting questionnaire research I actually found it more productive sending them by email because the respondent can edit his/her answers very easily.’

Susie: ‘I was especially pleased with the secondary research part of the project. The Internet proved to be the most useful resource of all. When I began the project, I never imagined that it would be able to match the narrow topic I had chosen, the relationship between female directors and how they portray women in their films. I was surprised by the number of film theory books I found, which were a great help too.

My primary research, however proved to be the most valuable in really finding out exactly what the target audience – women – felt about these female representations.

I found that a simple questionnaire provided me with the information I needed to write up the work successfully, enabling me to draw certain conclusions from the female opinions.’

Step three: Foreground your findings
When you have carried out all your research look at your findings and try and draw some conclusions. It is useful to produce a list of your conclusions. These can be divided into:
• what you are sure you found out (e.g. children’s favourite programmes)
• what you didn’t find out (e.g. it is impossible to prove the ways in which children’s behaviour is affected by television)
• what remains inconclusive (‘I think children are learning a lot but am not clear what …’).

Highlight any contradictions, don’t brush them under the carpet. These are potentially the most interesting area of your research. Half your research is telling you that television has a negative effect on children, half of it isn’t, your focus group study is inconclusive. Think about this and consider what it tells you. Sometimes your research might raise more questions than it answers …

Step four: Plan a sample exam answer
Now start thinking about how you want to write up your research. It is a good idea to use a sample exam question as a basis.

Plan out what you want to say, focusing carefully on answering the question. Check you understand the different requirements of each of the questions. Jot down which bits of your research you want to discuss in each section. Be realistic about the length of your piece. Ultimately, you need to be confident you have enough material to write about in a two hour exam: no more and no less.

Step five: Try writing up your sample exam essays
The first question wants you to discuss your own research; the second question is more about your findings. Both questions want you to stand back from your work and discuss its strengths and weaknesses.

Dan: ‘The main problem I had was making sure that my answer to question two was structured around the question. My first draft explained what I had found but didn’t say why this was clearly relevant to my question. I then went away and bullet-pointed all my main findings on a sheet of paper, and used these as my opening sentences. For example: ‘The first thing I found was evidence of the industry cashing in on the image as well as the music of the artist.’ Having done this I could now choose relevant evidence to back up my opening sentence.’

Susie: ‘I found the actual writing-up part harder than the research itself. The first part, simply describing the research I undertook, was fairly simple and self-explanatory but I had to be sure that I wrote it up in the actual order that I approached the project in. However, the second part did present a few problems for me. I found it difficult to answer the question directly but still be able to fit in the knowledge I had gained. After deciding the main paragraphs to divide it into and the rough content of them, I found it difficult to present them in an order which made sense sequentially but still answered the question directly. I often found myself going off on a tangent and straying from the focus. I overcame this by taking time to lift out the most important bits and re-arrange them back into a more sensible order.’

And one final reminder: Organise your notes to take into the exam!
• You are allowed to take four sides of handwritten A4 notes into the exam to help you write your answer.
• You cannot include essay plans, essay extracts, extended pieces of writing or typed material.
• You can include brief notes, facts and figures, diagrams, brief quotations, findings from audience research.
• Think carefully about what is useful to you and what isn’t.
• Organise your notes in a logical way so you can find information easily. Think about using highlighter pens, colour coding, organising material into bullet point lists, tables, charts.
• Information which is likely to be helpful:
– key findings from research.
– key findings from audience research.
– comprehensive list of all sources used (books, magazines, Internet sites) with authors, web addresses etc. It is useful to put these in a logical order (i.e. most and least helpful; contradictory sources).
– chart of useful statistics.
– selection of brief useful quotations.
– bullet point list of strengths and weaknesses of your work.
Good luck! Now read on to find out how Dan wrote about his research on Popular Music and Youth Culture. MM

Jean Welsh, Dan Fisher and Susie Webb, Hills Road Sixth Form Centre.

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