source
Danish series the killing (2011-2014)
A thriller that focuses on a female det and her investigation of a missing young woman
source
Danish series the killing (2011-2014)
A thriller that focuses on a female det and her investigation of a missing young woman
source
Media studies is an interdisciplinary subject; it blurs the boundaries between different academic subjects, particularly in the way in which it studies the media in wider contexts.
This approach suggests that the media - that is, it's products and processes - is directly linked to the society that produced them, that the media reflect the values, interests and make-up of the society that produced them.
Analysing the media in the context is to consider what else was happening in that time and place in which the product was made, to consider how those contexts may shape the product and the way audiences interpret it.
In this way, the study of media is in part also the study of a culture, both contemporary and historical. It is also relevant to consider whether the media itself is able to affect the society that produced it.
source: A level media studies essential introduction
Defining the Media
The definition within the subject of media, but also within social and political discussions, is increasingly difficult to pin down.
This is in part due to the proliferation of media forms, a consequence of the development of digital technologies and the changing relationships between producers and audiences.
The main means of mass communication [broadcasting, publishing and the internet] regarded collectively.
-a dictionary definition provides an objective categorisation but little sense of how the media function in relation to an audience and vice versa.
In media studies, the term 'media' is most helpfully understood as a process, something that shifts and changes as it is produced and consumed- a form of mediation.
Mediation refers to what media do, and to what we do with the media. It is a term that defines the media as actively creating a symbolic and cultural space in which meanings are created and communicated beyond the constraints of the face to face. Readers, viewers and audiences are part of this process of mediation because they continue the work of the media in the way they respond to extend and further communicate what they see and hear on the world's multitude of screens and speakers.
-Roger Silverstone (2006), an academic who was influential in the development of media studies as subject arguing mediation is central to a definition of media
In this definition, the process of mediation - the construction of meaning - is as much a part of the definition of media as the forms themselves.
The combination of a dynamic process of production and consumption, along with specific forms that we recognise as belonging to the media is a good starting point for a definition.
In conceiving of the media we also tend to include assumptions about a type of audience (mass rather than individual) that is addressed simultaneously by a mass form of communication.
While this definition is still often useful in considering the nature and influence of the media (e.g- millions who watch tv programmes like the X-factor or strictly at the same time on a Saturday night) the approach has altered with the changes to the media landscape.
Traditionally, there was a clear distinction between the media that was consumed by a mass audience at the same time (fixed tv broadcast before streaming, morning paper before news websites) and other forms such as novels that were consumed individually at the time a reader chose.
Part of the concerns about the power of the media was the fact that it was the media institutions that controlled the time and pace of consumption rather than the audience. This relationship between broadcast and consumption as a definition of the media has clearly undergone a major shift with streaming sites allowing 'binging' at the time consumers choose, news websites that are constantly checked and updated and social networks that often rely on very few posters and consumers operating at a particular time.
Task: Choose an audio-visual product (music video, advert etc.) and complete a detailed textual analysis. Try to use EVERY technical code and piece of media language we have looked at today.
You could make sub-headings of;
Cinematography
Mise-en-scene
Sound
Editing
In your analysis ensure when you make a point you explore how it creates meaning.
MEDIA LANGUAGE - MEANING
Billie Eilish - Therefore I am
-Key case study
Zoe Elizabeth Sugg
Born 28 March
English vlogger businesswomen and author
Began posting in 2009 to youtube
Went on to amass over 10 million subscribers (11m on one 4m on another)
In 2014 she launched Zoella Beauty- described as the 'biggest beauty launch of the year'
Later launched a range of complimentary homeware products in 2019
reported the two businesses had revenue of £3.8 million per year
Zoella's brand has changed, her original channel was called zoella which got 11 million subscribers, but she stopped posting on zoella and used the channel more zoella, which she renamed Zoe Sugg.
Her last Zoella video is a pizza tasting test, now on Zoe Sugg she posts vlogs about homeware. She's had to move with her target audience.
How does her last video use media language to create meaning?
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Y-DihSqK0eNHXzgWdU-3NdIoE9VuqsVGgE7USt_7yiE/edit?usp=sharing
Music videos are not products, they are adverts for products. They're generally freely accessible and free in price. In America they...