Introducing AS Media Presentation

16
What is Media? Introduction to AS Media Studies (MEST 1)

Transcript of Introducing AS Media Presentation

What is Media?Introduction to AS Media Studies (MEST 1)

What is a Medium?

It’s anything that gets between the “message” being sent and the “message” being received.

So it could be a pen!

in other words...

• The media is how messages are transmitted.

• The “message” could be anything, including news, facts about the world (documentary), drama, comedy, music, opinion: anything you can access through the media.

Texts

In media studies, to save the confusion of

talking about messages and

messengers, we talk about texts.

A media text could be...

• A book

• A newspaper (or article)

• A magazine (or article, picture etc.)

• An advert

• A Film or trailer

• TV programme

• A recording

• A poster

• A web site or page

• A graphic novel

• A pop promo/video

• A documentary

• A YouTube video...

But...

What does the medium do to the message?

(In other words, what happens in between?)

Packages

• Media texts come in individual packages (newspaper stories, TV or radio programmes, films, magazine spreads, web sites etc.)

• To create these packages, producers encode them using the conventions of that media platform

• The package is then decoded by the consumer (the audience)

• (We’ll discuss this business of encoding and decoding more later.)

Simple Example

Message(encoding)

Recipient(decoding)

Medium(+noise)

What is the medium doing to the message?

Mixed Messages

• The media are often accused of dumbing down the message.

• They’re often accused of bias

• The media can be very selective of the facts they tell us

• The media can distort the truth or simply get things wrong

Mediated experience

• Something that happens to you is a direct experience.

• But most of your knowledge about the world is indirect.

• You learn about the world through media texts: mediated experience

Key Concepts

• In Media Studies, we look at all these texts with a particular focus on key concepts.

• The key concepts are:

• Media Language

• Audience

• Institutions

• Representation

Media Language

• What we mean by “media language” are the forms and conventions used in media texts to encode and convey meanings.

• In a film, for example, the “media language” being used might include the way the camera moves, or the way music or lighting is used

• Both genre and narrative are important aspects of media language

Audience

• Who are the audience?

• Who is the spectator?

• What does the audience get out of using the media?

• How is the audience affected by the media language being used?

• How is the audience targeted?

Institutions

• Who makes media texts – and why?

• Who owns and runs the media – and why?

• Who controls and regulates the media – and why ?

• Do they do a good job?

Representation

• Does the media reflect or distort reality?

• Does it give a positive or negative view of individuals and groups?

• In other words, is it biased, racist, sexist – offensive?

• What are the effects on the audience of media portrayals of certain issues?

• What are the possible effects of being exposed to these representations for a lifetime?

• What do these representations tell us about the values and ideology of our society?

Review

• List some of the media texts you have accessed in the last 24 hours.

• How did you access these texts – and why?