COMS 371 - Week 4 (The Birmingham School)
(n) hypothetical positions in which decoding may be constructed
(3) dominant hegemonic code, negotiated code and oppositional code
oppositional code
adopts alternative frame of reference and makes meaning in way not originally intended by producer
encoding/decoding model
breaks down relationship between media maker and consumer, processes shaped by frameworks/relationships of production and technical infrastructure
encoding process
converting meaning into a series of signs or symbols
decoding process
converting signs or symbols into concepts and ideas
Stuart Hall
key figure in cultural studies and director of Open University, who was concerned with communication in relation to power. developed the encoding/decoding theory
negotiated code
mix of adaptive and oppositional elements and is between dominant and oppositional
dominant hegemonic code
often confirms social order, the reading that media makers want us to take, often confirming the social order
The Birmingham School
scholars based at University of Birmingham, many from working class backgrounds, with a radical orientation and aimed at questioning social structures and understanding distributions of social power. it is influence d by Marxism/feminism/anti-racism
culture jamming
the practice of appropriating mass media, by methods such as producing things parodying current media
sender/receiver model
Includes a sender, receiver, and a message. one of the first understandings of audience reception, did not understand complex relation between media makers and consumers