Title: MCM 733: Communication Theory
1MCM 733Communication Theory
2Ch 7Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Limited effects and functionalism was criticized
by Europeans who alleged that they favoured the
status quo - Children and adults grew up in a mediascape
- They watched more TV, were socialized by TV and
books. - This led to the idea that Mass Comm was educating
them and giving them models for living and
identity - Culture seemed to become more important culture
being defined as a set of learned behaviours for
members of a social group - Mass comm is privileging global voices over local
ones
3Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Cultural Studies focus on use of media to create
forms of culture that structure everyday life - Hegemonic Culture culture imposed from above or
outside that serves the interests of those in
dominant social positions - Political economy theories focus on socila
elites use of economic power to exploit media
institutions
4Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Microscopic interpretive theories focus on how
individuals and social groups use media to create
and foster forms of culture that structure
everyday life (critical) - Macroscopic theories how media institutions are
structured within capitalist economies. Examine
how social elites operate media to earn profits
and exercise influence in society (political
economy)
5Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Our experience of everyday life, including
reality itself is a social construction - Mass media help shape this construction
- They see themselves as agents of disruption
changing the political order by shirking
received opinion and making the familiar seem
unfamiliar
6Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Critical Cultural Theory these theorists espouse
a specific axiology which licenses them to
espouse specific values and use them to evaluate
and criticise the status quo - Critical theorists say that media tends to
reinforce the status quo because it is controlled
by power elites who wish to maintain power and
order to the exclusion of disempowered groups
7Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Critical Theories are concerned with
- Countercultures
- Pedagogy of the oppressed
- Struggle against authority
- Subversion of the known authority
- Revolution
- They refuse to promote a solution outside of
constant revolution because anytime that a social
structure is made, a power structure is put in
place and struggle and resistance must continue,
but with different actors.
8Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Marxist Theory
- Inspired by Hegel but reacted against Hegels
idealism (German Idealism) - Marx promoted a scientific material view of
society, based on economics and the study of
capital distribution among classes. - Ideology for Marx was a set of thoughts, beliefs
and metaphors so engrained that they become
subconscious a means for maintaining the social
dominance of the upper class - A superstructure (upper class) dominate a
substructure (proletarian) group mostly through
ideology and persuasion
9Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Neo Marxism
- British cultural studies is based on the concept
of neo-Marxism - Neo Marxists focus on the culture and ideology of
the superstructure. - They think that by subverting cultural norms that
oppress and exclude group, they can destabilize
the superstructure. This is due to their belief
in linguistic determinism. - Linguistic determinism the belief that reality
is entirely constructed through language and
discourse. - They favour subversion over violent revolution
10Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Textual Analysis and Literary Criticism
- Humanists have specialized in analyzing texts
since the renaissance. - The developed the cannon and the concept of
high culture modern critical theory is
identity-based and rejects all concept of high
culture, privileging popular culture - Now critical theory is divided between purely
hermeneutic (understanding-based) approaches and
neo-Marxist ones.
11Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Frankfurt School a group of mostly Jewish
neo-Marxist scholars at the U of Frankfurt. - Were humanists and used neo-Marxist methods to
analyze cultural products - Celebrated high culture and denigrated popular
culture as being the product of - Culture industries mass media that turn high
culture and folk culture into commodities for
profit - Most humanists analyzed the culture itself,
Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer focused on the
industries that produced it. - Frankfurt School had a big effect in the USA
because they emigrated to the USA during WWII
12Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Neo-Marxist Thoery in Britain
- British cultural studies combined neo-Marxist
theory with methods from linguistics,
anthropology, history and literary criticism. - Was focused on the domination of minorities and
identity-based oppressed groups (gender, race,
class, sexuality, subculture) by elites through
culture. - Hermeneutic attention is shifted from the
cultural products themselves toward the lived
culture of minority groups - Raymond Williams denigrated high culture and
privileged folk culture and he argued that mass
media posed a threat to worthwhile cultural
development because of its origins in marketing
for capitalist oppressors
13Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Stuart Hall understood ideology as those
images, concepts and premises which provide
frameworks through which we represent, interpret,
understand and make sense of some aspect of
social existence. - Mass media were a pluralistic public forum which
provides a site in which various forces
struggle to define social existence. Social
reality was defined in the mass media.
14Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- The activism of British Cultural Studies was both
its strength and its downfall. - They are accused of strong bias and turning
academic research into a program for cause
advocacy. - Their work has also been accused of creating a
nihilistic culture of resentment which only
leads to division and bitterness among different
social groups. - It has also been argued that that their focus on
the group belonging and identity is a regressive
factor away from liberalism.
15Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Cultural studies in America Transmission versus
ritual perspectives - Functionalist and limited effects theories have
taken a transmissional perspective - Cultural studies is focused on our everyday
rituals that structure and shape our reality - Ritual perspective view of mass comm as the
representation of shared belief where reality is
produced, maintained, repaired and transformed
16Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- American Popular Culture Research
- Strongly influenced by Marshall McLuhan unlike
British critical theorists, they are not activist
and share McLuhans optimism - Some major findings
- TV shows have multiple layers of meaning which
are put there on purpose - Audience interpretations of content are very
diverse
17Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- Harold Innis The Bias of Communication
- Different empires were based on communication
technologies that privileged types of knowledge - Empire expansion relied more on messaging from
the centre than military might - New comms techs create struggles between types of
knowledge - Space-binding vs. time-binding techs
- The Bias of communication new techs also tended
to centralize power - Theory of the periphery and the centre
18Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- McLuhan
- The Medium is the Message focused on popular
culture - Change in comm techs bring about change in
culture and social order - McLuhan was not critical he was not a member of
revolutionary groups or - McLuhan was cognitivist communication
technologies are extensions of the mind and the
body - Technological determinist
19Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- McLuhan thought that comms techs could transform
our sensory experiences - The medium is the message new forms of media
transform our experience of ourselves and our
society and this influence is ultimately more
important than the content of the specific
messages. The content of a medium is another
medium - Global village a new form of social organization
emerging as instantaneous electronic media tie
the entire world into one great
social-political-psychological network.
20Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- The extensions of Man media literally extend
sight, hearing and tough through time and space - Aural vs. visual space linear, alphabetic,
visual cultural changed social cognition and
constrained it. Aural culture freed the mind and
brought back stories, myths and retribalized
socieyt - Hot and cool media hot is high def and cool is
low-def
21Ch 7 Emergence of Critical Cultural Theories
- McLuhan was wildly popular in the communications
industry - Dismissed by empirical researchers
- Dismissed by critical theorists for his optimism
and cognitivism and lack of desire for bloody
revolution or sneaky subversion of the elites.
McLuhan thought subversion was profoundly
dishonest and could lead to no good. - McLuhan was the popcultural and mass comm guru
but personally disliked technology and mass
culture he was scholarly, contemplative, a
dandy, and very religious (Catholic).
22Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Source dominated to active audience theory
- Uses and gratifications theory was the first to
give the audience credit. Herzogs soap opera
study identified three major means of
gratification - Listening was a means of emotional release
- Opportunities for wishful thinking
- Advice on life
- UG the uses to which people put media and
gratifications they seek from it.
23Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Revival of UG
- UG offered three tantalizing characteristics of
computer-mediated mass comm - Interactivity strengthens the concept of the
active user - Demassification individuals can tailor content
to their needs - Asynchroneity individuals can receive messages
in a staggered fashion.
24Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- The Active Audience Revisited
- Blumler (1979) identified several meanings for
the term activity - Utility media have uses for people and people
can put media to those uses - Intentionality consumption of media content can
be directed by peoples prior motivations - Selectivity peoples use of media might reflect
their existing interests and preferences - Imperviousness to influence audience members are
often obstinate they might not want to be
controlled by anyone or anything, even mass
media. Audience members actively avoid certain
types of media influence.
25Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Basic Assumptions of the UG Model
- The audience is active and its media use is
goal-oriented - The initiative in linking need gratification to a
specific media choice rests with the audience
member - The media compete with other sources of need
satisfaction - People are aware enough of their own media use,
interests, and motives to be able to provide
researchers with an accurate picture of that use - Value judgements regarding the audiences lining
its needs to specific media or content should be
suspended
26Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Types of Social Situations in which UG apply
- Social situations can produce tensions and
conflicts leading to pressure for their easement
through media consumption - Social situations can create an awareness f
problems that demand attention, info about which
might be sought in media - Social situations can impoverish real-life
opportunities to satisfy certain needs, and the
media can serve as substitutes or supplements. - Social situations often elicit specific values
and their affirmation and reinforcement can be
facilitated by the consumption of related media
materials. - Social Situations can provide realms of
expectations of familiarity with media, which
must be met to sustain membership in specific
social groups
27Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Reception Studies Decoding and Sense-making
- Reception studies audience-centered theory that
focuses on how various types of audience members
make sense of specific forms of content - Polysemic the characteristic of media texts as
fundamentally ambiguous and legitimately
interpretable in different ways. - Preferred reading in critical theory the
producer-intended meaning of a piece of content
assumed to reinforce the status quo - Negotiated meaning when an audience member
creates a personally meaningful interpretation
of content that differs from the preferred
reading in important ways. - Oppositional decoding when an audience member
develops interpretations of content that are in
direct opposition to a dominant reading
28Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Feminist Reception studies
- Radway (1986) found that many women read in book
clubs, romance novels, in silent rebellion
against male domination. The books were an escape
from housework and liked men who were strong but
gentle and women who controlled their own
destinies - Steiner (1988) studied 10 yrs of the no comment
feature of Ms. magazine. She argued that Ms.
readers engaged in oppositional decoding of
stories of male domination - McRobbie (1984) did a similar reading of
Flashdance. Girls liked it more because of the
dream of physical autonomy it presented than any
simple acceptance of male domination
29Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- New Directions in Audience Effects Research The
Rise of Moderate Effects Theories - Information Processing theory mechanistic
analogies to describe and interpret how people
deal with all the stimuli they receive - Entertainment theory conceptualizes and
explicates key psychological mechanisms
underlying audience use and enjoyment of
entertainment oriented media content - Social marketing theory collection of
middle-range theories concerned with promoting
socially valuable information
30Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Information-Processing Theory CogSci
- Humans as information processing biological
machines - Our mind/brain helps us navigate the flow of
information, we avoid and filter more than we
seek out - Big difference between cognition (passive) and
consciousness (active) - Consciousness does not always give us an
accurate picture of reality
31Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Cognition is the product of human evolution it
is biological and genetic/epigenetic - We use these cognitive mechanisms to read the
thousands of pieces of non-verbal information we
are surrounded by everyday - Cogsci provides insight into the mechanisms
active when we interact with media/language/art/te
xt/music/taste/smell
32Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Cognitive science recognizes the limits of
consciousness we associate consciousness and
rationality, but neuroscience is showing the
power of affect (Scientific American Mind) - We have limited cognitive resources
- We prioritize visual information
- Poorly structured news stories were hard to
understand even though the audience tried hard
33Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Processing Television News
- We approach TV news passively
- We are distracted by many other things while we
watch - We depend on visual and auditory cues to draw our
attention to particular stories - Schemas more or less highly structured sets of
categories or plans - The average newscast is so complicated to be
biased against understanding - Human interest stories with compelling plotlines
were well understood - Stories with unrelated visuals or jargon were
hard to understand.
34Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Entertainment theory
- Studies the psychological processes associated
with entertainment - Mood Management Theory
- The main reason we use media is to regulate,
change and control our moods
35Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Social Marketing Theory
- Methods for inducing awareness of campaign topics
or themes - Methods for targeting message at audiences more
susceptible to receiving them - Methods for reinforcing messages within targeted
segments and for encouraging people to influence
others through face-to-face - Methods for cultivating images of people,
products and services - Methods for stimulating interest and inducing
information seeking by audience members - Methods for inducing desired decision making or
positioning - Methods for activating audience segments,
especially those who have been targeted by the
campaign
36Ch 9 Audience Theories Uses, Reception and
Effects
- Hierarchy of Effects practical theory calling
for the differentiation of persuasion effects
relative to the time and effect necessary for
their accomplishment - Digital Divide lack of access to communication
technologies for certain communities (rural,
racial, poor)