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- reinforcement or change of beliefs, attitudes, values - “” personal or public behavior - “” self-identity or sense of personal agency - “” group identity or sense of group agency - “” orientation toward the world |
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dialogue showed program’s positive reinforcement of themes of motherly intuition and family ideology |
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visual and verbal codes represents complex representation of AA life |
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Dirty politics – political ads |
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Deadly Persuasion – feminist critique of product ads aimed at women |
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What Audience centered criticism focuses on |
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- the conception of the role of audience - the dynamics of reception |
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identify and analyze the “ideal” audience positions |
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texts seemed to exist w/o readers |
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Basic Characteristics of Reader-Oriented Criticism |
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- the text’s characterizing of the reader - the text’s attempt to control the reading act |
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defining readers as social products which are both historically and culturally situated |
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most often characterized off-screen by being directly addressed by someone on-screen |
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texts structure ideal reading through call of pretension, providing pressure on readers to answer questions |
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What reader oriented criticism posits |
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- the conception of the role of audience - the dynamics of reception |
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most critics start with a text that is problematic in terms of what it says a/t the audience or demands from it |
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Strengths and limitations of reader-oriented criticism |
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- major strength: it discerns how the text characterizes and attempts to engage viewers
- major limitation: it is dependent on deducing the reading act, based on critic’s own experiences, and thus can only theorize the reader from a distance |
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Stuart Hall's Encoding/Decoding Model |
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distinguishes b/w three types of readers - dominant/preferred - negotiated - oppositional |
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- open to variant meanings - result from active viewers engaged in semiotic labor, adopting meanings for pieces of language to their own experiences |
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Morley’s landmark study pointed to 2 needs in AEC |
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- need to focus on people who normally view certain programs
- need to focus on understanding the dynamics of viewing within the context that viewing normally takes place |
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audience identify with the psychological factors affecting a character and share his/her feelings despite unrealistic narratives |
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refers to the psycho-social responses that are encourages and cultivated through encounters w/ popular cultural texts. The viewer uses the program as a cultural resource from which they inform and stimulate an imaginative response. Thus the viewer is able to retreat from the monotony of the day-to-day into the stimulated melodrama |
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triangulation (multiple methods – often combining the analysis of texts w/ observing viewing and depth interviewing) |
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Lofland’s four tenets of the ethnographic report |
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- the report is close to data and based on substantial observation - it is truthful and written in good faith - it uses much description and illustrative quotations - it states procedures for analyzing the data |
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Van Mannen’s distinction of the two types of ethnographic research reports |
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- realist tale – told from the vantage point of the subjects and framed in terms of their lives
- confessional tale – stresses critic-fieldworker’s vantage point and including researcher’s identity provides full disclosure and insights |
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the Miles and Huberman approach |
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- analysis will need to reduce large amounts of data to concise, but rich descriptions of patterns and features
- analysis will display data in organized, illustrative ways
- analysis will explain procedures used to arrive at interpretive conclusions |
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Conclusions drawn through AEC in two ways |
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- analytic induction - works from the researcher’s assumptions and assesses tightness of fit for causal generalizations
- grounded theory – arises from the data to fit context under study |
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Strengths and limitations of audience ethnographic criticism |
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Strengths - depth of description and analysis of audience meaning construction provides new ways of watching TV; understanding meaning through viewer’s eyes o
Limitations - dependent on small samples (generalizations difficult); critic may bring unintentional bias to interpreting audience experience |
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Defining ideology and ideological criticism |
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- defines ideology as “meaning in the service of power”
- investigates the ways in which cultural practices and institutions produce particular knowledge and positions for their users i.e. TV audiences |
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Marxist Theory says that.... |
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- Things aren’t always as they seem - profit rules - the system of economic relationships (characterized by profit, efficiency, and control) - idea of ruling economic and political class is 'false consciousness' b/c they lead ordinary people to accept as normal and natural - people who accept beliefs and values of powerful social classes as their own are fools of the dominant ideology |
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Race, age, class, etc. clash |
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Gramsci’s Theory of Hegemony |
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- Revised Marx’s notion of how ideology works in a way that was diff from Althusser
- hegemony describes the general predominance of particular class, political and ideological interests within a given society |
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a struggle over which ideas are recognized as the prevailing, commonsense view for the majority |
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Usefulness of ideological criticism as a method |
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defines ideographs as common, deeply revered ordinary lang terms for higher order |
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Discursive Analysis 3 types |
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- discourse - system of representation, reads TV texts in terms of existing political debates
- metaphor - uses rhetorical, narrative, and ideological concepts to identify and examine ideological positions organized and foregrounded by the verbal and visual metaphors in the text - Mumby and Spitack – politics is war vs politics is a game
- ontological - way of viewing events, activities, emotions, ideas, etc. as entities and substances |
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