Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Further research for power and the Media

Look at the following terminology for POWER AND THE MEDIA


  • Media Power – The ability of media institutions to influence audience beliefs, attitudes, and behavior.

  • Ideology – A system of values and beliefs often promoted by dominant institutions.

  • Hegemony – Dominant ideologies are accepted as common sense or natural (Gramsci).

  • Cultural Imperialism – The dominance of one culture’s media and values over another.

  • Gatekeeping – The process through which information is filtered for dissemination.

  • Agenda-Setting – The media's role in determining which issues are considered important.

  • Framing – How media presents and structures information to influence interpretation.

  • Media Convergence – The merging of previously distinct media technologies and platforms.

    - Rhetoric 

    - Narrative 


    2. Ownership & Control

    • Media Conglomerate – A large company that owns many different media outlets.

    • Vertical Integration – A company controls production, distribution, and exhibition.

    • Horizontal Integration – A company acquires or merges with competitors in the same industry.

    • Oligopoly – A market dominated by a small number of large companies.

    • Public Service Broadcasting (PSB) – Media funded by the public, meant to inform and educate (e.g., BBC).

    • Commercial Media – Media driven by profit, advertising, and audience size.

    • Monopoly – When a single company dominates a particular media sector.


      3. Regulation & Censorship

      • Media Regulation – Rules and standards that govern media content and distribution.

      • Censorship – The suppression or control of media content.

      • Self-Regulation – Media industries policing themselves rather than being regulated by governments.

      • Regulatory Bodies – Organizations that enforce media laws (e.g., Ofcom, FCC).

      • Freedom of the Press – The right of media to publish without government interference.

      • Moral Panic – A widespread fear, often exaggerated, about a threat to societal norms, amplified by the media (Cohen).


        4. Power + Media Audience  

        • Passive Audience – Audiences who accept media messages without question.

        • Active Audience – Audiences who interpret and respond to media in varied ways.

        • Uses and Gratifications – Theory that audiences use media to fulfill needs (e.g., entertainment, information).

        • Reception Theory – Audiences interpret texts differently depending on context and background (Hall).

        • Negotiated Reading – An interpretation partly aligned with the intended message, but with some resistance.

        • Oppositional Reading – An interpretation that completely rejects the intended message.



          6. Media Theorists to Know (Name + Idea)

          • Stuart Hall – Representation; Encoding/Decoding model.

          • Antonio Gramsci – Cultural hegemony.

          • Marshall McLuhan – "The medium is the message"; technological determinism.

            Jenkins (participatory culture


            CASE STUDIES 


             Media Ownership & Control

            Disney / The Walt Disney Company

            • Focus: Media conglomeration, horizontal & vertical integration, cultural imperialism.

            • Theory Links: Hesmondhalgh (cultural industries), Adorno & Horkheimer (culture industry).

            • Key Points:

              • Ownership of Marvel, Lucasfilm, ESPN, 20th Century Studios.

              • Cross-platform synergy & global reach.

              • Dominance in children’s content and ideological influence.



                Audiences & Power

                 #BlackLivesMatter and Social Media Activism

                • Focus: Audience empowerment, alternative narratives.

                • Theory Links: Jenkins (participatory culture), Hall (oppositional readings).

                • Key Points:

                  • BLM’s use of platforms like Twitter and Instagram to bypass mainstream media.

                  • Power shift from institutions to grassroots movements.

                  • Challenge to dominant representations of race and justice.

  • No comments:

    Post a Comment