Navigating Media and Mass Communication

MASS MEDIA

The technology that makes mass communication possible

Includes...

  • Printing press
  • Radio
  • Television
  • Camera
  • Internet

The channels by which messages are transmitted

The agencies that control those channels and determine which messages are transmitted (gatekeepers)

MASS COMMUNICATION

The transmission of a message from a single source to multiple recipients at the same time

Includes...

  • A speaker
  • A subject of discussion
  • A listener (audience)
  • A medium
  • A consequence

Two-Step Flow of Communication

Information and ideas move from the media to “opinion leaders,” and from them to other people in their social network (Katz & Lazarsfeld)

MEDIA AND SOCIAL CHANGE

Media as a mechanism for informing, socializing, and educating the public

People become more knowledgeable about the world and about cultural variety

People become more likely to demand an open, democratic society

Media consumption helps to bring about social change

Internet and Social Life

Internet users are both consumers and producers of information

  • Increased interactions—ability to communicate simultaneously with many people and to create online relationships (friendships, support groups, online dating)

The Internet has a societal impact on:

  • Communities
  • Politics
  • Organizations
  • Culture

Modernization

The promotion, in less-developed countries, of non-traditional, mainly Western knowledge, attitudes, and practices with regard to a variety of topics

MEDIA OWNERSHIP IN CANADA

Publicly Owned Media

Receives funding from or is owned/operated by federal or provincial governments

  • Concerned with public service and fulfilling social needs

Media Concentration

As fewer companies control more media outlets, fewer points of view are represented and public debate suffers

Privately Owned Media

Comprises most of the mass media

  • Mainly concerned with profit-making

Cross-Ownership

A business structure in which one corporation owns media businesses of different types

Conglomerate

A business structure engaged in several, usually unrelated business endeavours

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Concepts and issues associated with media content

Commodification

Media messages teach and encourage people to be consumers

Power Relations

Media are dominated by a few powerful interests

Violence

Promoted as a method to resolve problems and conflict

  • Correlations between playing violent video games and aggressive behaviours

Cultivation theory

Heavy television viewers are overexposed to violent imagery and storytelling

Results in “Mean World Syndrome

An exaggerated perception of risk and danger that creates a homogenous, fearful population (Gerbner & Gross)

Bias and Distortion

Filters

Media show some things and ignore /hide others

  • Emphasize stories that are sensational, reflect “negative news,” and appeal to a mass audience

Claims-making

Strategy associated with the social construction of reality

  • Involves moral entrepreneurs— individuals/groups bent on swaying opinion and driving political action on a social issue the individual/group has defined

Hyperreality

The simulation or representation of something that does not exist (e.g. “reality” television) (Eco, Baudrillard)

Production-of-culture perspective

Sees television as a social institution that frames social reality to uphold established balances of power (Gans)

  • News coverage tends to be superficial, reflect the views of network owners, and favour one political party or ideology

Inequality

Minority groups are underrepresented and misrepresented, often portrayed as objects of consumption and display, or as victims

Digital divide

Differences in access to technology perpetuate social inequalities, being influenced by gender, socioeconomic status, and location

Male gaze

Sexist, objectifying way of viewing and portraying women

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NAMES WORTH KNOWING

Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) was a Canadian media theorist who examined the influence of technology on society and culture, and is known for the expression “the medium is the message” and the term global village.

Edward S. Herman (b. 1925) and Noam Chomsky (b. 1928) wrote Manufacturing Consent (1988), an analysis of the news media that proposes the American mass media are powerful ideological institutions that rely on self-censorship to produce propaganda supporting the capitalist economic system.

Herbert J. Gans (b. 1927) observed that news reporting is concerned with appealing to a mass audience and is shaped by the interests of people in high positions.

Jean Baudrillard (1929–2007) explored the concept of hyperreality, arguing that Westerners construct timeless, perfect fantasy worlds they consider real, but where nothing is authentic.

Suzanna Walters studies gender, sexuality, and popular culture, including how the media portrays women as objects of consumption through the male gaze.