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Title: Communications 100 Ch.1
Description: These notes are a complete outline of chapter one of the standard college communications 100 level class. The notes are extremely detailed including bolded vocabulary, highlighted important dates and people and inside notes taken from in class lectures.
Description: These notes are a complete outline of chapter one of the standard college communications 100 level class. The notes are extremely detailed including bolded vocabulary, highlighted important dates and people and inside notes taken from in class lectures.
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Amanda McMahon
Communications
9/2/13
•
Chapter 1: Mass Communication, Culture, and Media Literacy
How communication works, how it changes when technology is introduced
into the process, and how different view of communication and mass
communication can lead to different interpretations of their power
What Is Mass Communication?
• Fundamental theme of this book is that media do none of this alone
• They do it with us as well at to us through mass communication, and they do
it as central-‐ many critics and scholars say the central-‐ cultural force in our
society
Communication Defined
• Communication is the transmission of a message from a source to a receiver
• There must be a sharing (or correspondence) of meaning for communication
to take place
• Feedbackà message
• Communication is a reciprocal and ongoing process with all involved parties
more or less enough in creating shared meaningà defined as the process of
creating shared meaning
• Communication researcher Wilbur Schrammà interpersonal
communicationà communication between two or a few people (shows that
there is no clearly identifiable source or receiver
...
Are also subject to additional feedback, usually in the form of
criticism in other media, such as TV critic writing a column in a newspaper
• The immediacy and directness of feedback in interpersonal communication
free communicators to gamble, to experiment with different approaches
• Knowledge of one another enables to tailor their messages as narrowly
• Interpersonal communication is often personally relevant and possibly even
adventurous and challenging
• Mass comm
...
Carey (1975) offered a cultural definition of
communication that had a profound impact on the way communication
scientists and other have viewed the relationship between communication
and culture
What Is Culture?
• Culture is the learned behavior of members of a given social group
1
...
Lends significance to human experience by selecting from and organizing it
3
...
Historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbolic forms by
means of which people communication, perpetuate, and develop their
knowledge about attitudes toward life
Culture as Socially Constructed Shared Meaning
• Creation and maintenance of a more or less common culture occurs through
communication, including mass communication
• When media professionals produce content that we read, listen to, or watch,
meaning is being shared and culture is being constructed and maintained
Functions and Effect of Culture
• Helps categorize and classify our experiencesà defines us, our world, and
our place in it
• Can have a number of sometimes conflicting effects
• Culture provides information that helps us make meaningful distinctions
about right and wrong, appropriate and inappropriate, good and bad,
attractive and unattractive, and so on
• Culture’s limiting effects can be negativeà when we are unwilling or unable
to move past patterned, repetitive ways of thinking, feeling, and acting or
when we entrust our “learning” to teachers whose interest selfish, narrow, or
otherwise not consistent with out own
• Dominate culture (or mainstream culture) the one that seems to hold sway
with the majority of people is often openly challenged
• Sofia Vergara, Queen Latifah, J-‐Lo, and Jennifer Hudson all represent
alternatives to our culture’s idealized standards of beauty and all have major
power
• Liberation from the limitation imposed by culture resides in our ability and
willingness to learn and use new patterned, repetitive ways of thinking,
feeling and acting
•
Bounded cultures (or co-‐cultures)à these smaller cultures unite groups of
people and enable them to see themselves as different from other groups
around them
• Culture is constructed and maintained through communicationà also
communication (or miscommunication) that turns differentiation into
division
• Culture can divide us, but culture also unites usà represents our collective
experience
• Through communication with people in our culture, we internalize cultural
norms and values, those things that bind our many diverse bounded cultures
into a functioning, cohesive society
Mass Communication and Culture
Mass Media as Cultural Storytellers
• Have responsibility to question the tellers and their stories to interpret
stories in ways consistent with larger or more important cultural values and
truths
• To do less is to miss an opportunity to construct our own meaning and
thereby culture
Mass Communication as Cultural Forum
• Mass comm
...
It interrupts our own story,
interrupts our ability to have a thought or daydream, to imagine something
wonderful because we’re too busy bridging the walk from the cafeteria back
to the office on the cell phone
...
It’s a business
...
We exist to put commercials on the air
...
”
•
Keep in mind that our is a capitalist economic system and that media
industries are businesses
• Our task is to understand the constraints places on these industries by their
economics and then demand that, within those limits, they perform ethically
and responsibly
Mass Communication, Culture, and Media Literacy
• Our level of skill in the mass communication process is therefore of utmost
importance
• The skill is media literacy the ability to effectively and efficiently
comprehend and use any form of mediated communication
The Gutenberg Revolution
• Literacy-‐ the ability to effectively and efficiently comprehend and use
written symbols
• Guttenberg’s invention was world-‐changing because it opened literacy to all,
that is, it allowed mass communication
• Printed materials were the first mass-‐produced product, speeding the
development and entrenchment of capitalism
Media Literacy
• “If it bleeds, it leads” has become the mottoes for much of local TV newsà it
leads because people watch
• We possess high-‐level interpretive and comprehension skills that make even
the most sophisticated TV show, movie or magazine story understandable
and enjoyable
• Consider how important the mass media are in creating and maintain the
culture that helps define us and our livesà a skill that must be improved
Elements of Media Literacy
• Media literacy includes these characteristics
1
...
an understanding of the process of ass communication
3
...
strategies for analyzing and discussing media messages
5
...
the ability to enjoy, understand and appreciate media content
• multiple points of accessà to approach media content from a variety of
directions and derive from it many levels of meaning
7
...
an understanding of the ethical and moral obligations of media practitioners
Media Literacy Skills
• media-‐literate consumption, however, requires a number of specific skills
1
...
an understanding of an respect for the power of media messages
•
third-‐person effectà the common attitude that other are influenced by media
messages but that we are not
3
...
development of heightened expectations of media content
5
...
the ability to think critically about media messages, no matter how credible
their sources
7
Title: Communications 100 Ch.1
Description: These notes are a complete outline of chapter one of the standard college communications 100 level class. The notes are extremely detailed including bolded vocabulary, highlighted important dates and people and inside notes taken from in class lectures.
Description: These notes are a complete outline of chapter one of the standard college communications 100 level class. The notes are extremely detailed including bolded vocabulary, highlighted important dates and people and inside notes taken from in class lectures.