Cultural Studies: Chapter 27
Since one of Hall's states aims is to unmask the power imbalances within society, he says the cultural studies approach is valid if it
"deconstructs" the current structure of a media research establishment that fails to deal with ideology
The fact that the media present a preferred interpretation of human events is no reason to assume that the audience will correctly
"take in" the offered ideology
Hall outlines three decoding options
(1) operating inside the dominant code - The media produce the message; the masses consume it. The audience reading coincides with the preferred reading. (2) Applying a negotiable code - The audience assimilates the leading ideology in general but opposes its application in specific cases. (3) Substituting an oppositional code - The audience sees through the establish- ment bias in the media presentation and mounts an organized effort to demythologize the news.
Cultural studies
A neo-Marxist critique that sets forth the position that mass media manufacture consent for dominant ideologies.
Hall's "optimism of the will"
Hall is determined to do everything he can to expose and alter the media's structuring of reality
Hall's "pessimism of the intellect"
Hall's belief that the powerless can't change the system with all the channels of mass communication in the unwitting service of the dominant ideology
Type of theory and tradition
Interpretive theory that follows the critical tradition
Stuart Hall
Jamaican-born emeritus professor of sociology at the Open University in the U.K. He attacks "mainstream" communication research that is empirical, quantitative, and narrowly focused on discovering cause-and-effect relationships. He doubts social scientists' ability to find useful answers to important questions about media influence.
Stuart Hall owes an intellectual debt to
Karl Marx. Marxism is at root a theory of economics and power. The Marxist golden rule suggests that he who has the gold, rules.
Instead, Hall adopts a
Marxism without guarantees. He realizes that his theory is not pure, but he'd rather be "right but not rigorous" than "rigorous but wrong"
Economic determinism
The belief that human behavior and relationships are ultimately caused by differences in financial resources and the disparity in power that those gaps create.
Democratic pluralism
The myth that society is held together by common norms such as equal opportunity, respect for diversity, one person-one vote, individual rights, and rule of law.
Discursive formation
The process by which unquestioned and seemingly natural ways of interpreting the world become ideologies.
Articulate
The process of speaking out on oppression and linking that subjugation with media representations; the work of cultural studies.
Hall emphasizes that media hegemony is not
a conscious plot, it's not overtly coercive, and its effects are not total
Hall suggests that hegemonic encoding occurs
all the time, though it's not a conscious plot
Winslow says a primary goal of ideological scholarship is to
bring comfort to the afflicted and [to] afflict the comfortable by questioning taken-for-granted assumptions, giving voice to the voiceless, and bringing in those on the margins of society.
Hall believes that the consent-making function of the mass media is to
convince readers and viewers that they share the same interests as those who hold the reins of power
Within the U.S., the vast majority of information we receive is produced and distributed by
corporations. Hall believes that corporate control of such influential information sources prevents many stories from being told.
The usual finding that media messages have little effect celebrates the political claim that
democracy works
Hall says people learn what signs mean through
discourse - through communication and culture. Primarily, culture is concerned with the production and exchange of meanings between the members of a society or group. To say that two people belong to the same culture is to say that they interpret the world in roughly the same ways and can express themselves, their thoughts and feelings about the world in ways that will be understood by each other.
Hall believes the mass media maintain the
dominance of those already in positions of power. Conversely, the media exploit the poor and powerless. He charges that the field of communication continues to be "stubbornly sociologically innocent." He is "deeply suspicious of and hostile to empirical work that has no ideas because that simply means that it does not know the ideas it has.
Hall doesn't subscribe to the hard-line brand of
economic determinism. He thinks that's too simple. He found that his physical appearance was often as important as his economic class in the way people reacted to him.
Hall believes the purpose of theory and research is to
empower people who live on the margins of society, people who have little say in the direction of their lives and who are scrambling to survive
Hall holds out the possibility that the powerless may be
equally obstinate (stubborn) by resisting the dominant ideology and translating the message in a way that's more congenial to their own interests
Discourse
frameworks of interpretation
Hall's most positive contribution to mass communication study is his constant reminder that it's
futile (useless) to talk about meaning without considering power at the same time
Hall draws upon Antonio Gramsci's concept of
hegemony to explain why the revolution Marx predicted hasn't occurred in any industrial society
Hall wants to
liberate people from an unknowing acquiescence to the dominant ideology of the culture. He places less emphasis on rationality and more emphasis on resistance. For him, the truth of cultural studies is established by its ability to raise our consciousness of the media's role in preserving the status quo
Critique
many women decried his relative silence on their plight as equal victims of the hegemony he railed against. The most often hear criticism of Hall's work is that he doesn't offer specific remedies for the problems he identifies.
Hall believes that mainstream mass communication research in the U.S. serves the
myth of democratic pluralism
Consistent with Marxist theory, he also insists that communication scholarship should examine
power relations and social structures
The broadcast and print media present a variety of ideas, but then they tend to
prop up the status quo by privileging the already-accepted interpretation of reality. The result is that the role of mass media turns out to be "production of consent" rather than a "reflection of consensus" that already exists
Luke Winslow claims that the representation of ordinary people on
reality TV offers its viewer more explicit guidelines for living than other television genres
Hall has worked to move the study of communication away from
relationship development, influence, media effects, and so on. He believes we should be studying the unifying atmosphere in which they all occur and from which they emanate - human culture.
Hall says that it is not enough that we
simply recognize that meaning is created in discourse. We must also examine the sources of that discourse, especially the originators or "speakers" of it.
Hall believes that typical research on individual voting behavior, brand loyalty, or response to dramatic violence fails to uncover the
struggle for power that the media mask. He thinks it's a mistake to treat communication as a separate academic discipline. Academic isolation tends to separate messages from the culture they inhabit. Therefore, Hall refers to his work as cultural studies rather than media studies
The ideological fight is a
struggle to capture language. Hall sees those on the margins of society doing semantic battle on a media playing field that will never be quite level
Hall believes the mass media provide
the guiding myths that shape our perception of the world and serve as important instruments of social control
Hall defines ideologies as
the mental frameworks—the languages, the concepts, categories, imagery of thought, and the representation— which different classes and social groups deploy in order to make sense of, define, figure out and render intelligible the way society works. Most of us are unaware of our ideologies and the tremendous impact they can have on our lives
Culture industries
the producers of culture; TV, radio, music, film, fashion, magazines, newspapers, etc.
In a capitalistic society,
the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Great wealth comes to the privileged few who did little to create it.
Hegemony
the subtle sway of society's haves over its have nots
Hall states that the primary function of discourse is
to make meaning
Hall and scholars who follow his lead wish to place the academic spotlight directly on the
ways media representations of culture reproduce social inequalities and keep the average person more or less powerless to do anything but operate within a corporatized, commodified world
The ultimate issue for cultural studies is not
what information is presented by whose information it is