DESIGN AND ACCESSIBILITY
Design - Audience
A - B
Shannon and Weaver
Source - encoder - channel (noise) - decoder - Destination
Context - Semiotics
Audience theory
- Class
- Race
- Sex
- Gender
Mass Audience
Frankfurt school - Adorno
Effects model - Hypodermic syringe
Reception Theory
David Morley (1980) Preferred reading / dominant reading / oppositional / negotiated
Uses & Gratifications model (receptional theory extention)
Death of an Author
IN RELATION TO TOPIC
Brand watching - Giles Lury
Hypodermic Syringe
The brand is making you buy
Visual aesthetic for working class
COMMUNICATION THEORY Chapter
ANALYSIS of Tesco brand
http://sonamjourno.blogspot.co.uk/2011/02/hypodermic-needle-theory-magic-bullet.html
The "hypodermic needle theory" implied mass media had a direct, immediate and powerful effect on its audiences. The mass media in the 1940s and 1950s were perceived as a powerful influence on behavior change.
Several factors contributed to this "strong effects" theory of communication, including:
- the fast rise and popularization of radio and television
- the emergence of the persuasion industries, such as advertising and propaganda
- the Payne Fund studies of the 1930s, which focused on the impact of motion pictures on children, and
- Hitler's monopolization of the mass media during WWII to unify the German public behind the Nazi party
http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Modules/MAinTV/morleynw.html
- Morley outlined three hypothetical positions (adapted from Frank Parkin) which the reader of a programme might occupy (1983, pp. 109-10; see also 1981b, p. 51 and 1992, p. 89):
- Dominant (or 'hegemonic') reading: The reader shares the programme's 'code' (its meaning system of values, attitudes, beliefs and assumptions) and fully accepts the programme's 'preferred reading' (a reading which may not have been the result of any conscious intention on the part of the programme makers).
- Negotiated reading: The reader partly shares the programme's code and broadly accepts the preferred reading, but modifies it in a way which reflects their position and interests.
- Oppositional ('counter-hegemonic') reading: The reader does not share the programme's code and rejects the preferred reading, bringing to bear an alternative frame of interpretation.
Summaries and commentaries on the responses of each of the groups interviewed in Morley's NWA study are presented here in the order in which he places them in the spectrum of readings from 'dominant', via 'negotiated', to 'oppositional'.
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