question 1b media language

12
G235: Critical Perspectives in Media Theoretical Evaluation of Production

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Page 1: Question 1b Media Language

G235: Critical Perspectives in Media Theoretical Evaluation of Production

1(b) Media Language

Page 2: Question 1b Media Language

Aims/Objectives

• To reinforce the basic media language that create meaning in texts.

• To have a basic understanding of how to evaluate your coursework against the media language that you used.

Page 3: Question 1b Media Language

Importance of media language

• Every medium has its own ‘language’ – or combination of languages – that it uses to communicate meaning. Television, for example, uses verbal and written language as well as the languages of moving images and sound.

• We call these ‘languages’ because they use familiar codes and conventions that are generally understood.

Page 4: Question 1b Media Language

Denotation, Connotation and Myth

• In semiotics, denotation and connotation are terms describing the relationship between the signifier and its signified.

Page 5: Question 1b Media Language

• Barthes (1977) argued that in film connotation can be (analytically) distinguished from denotation.

• As John Fiske (1982) puts it “denotation is what is filmed, connotation is how it is filmed”.

Page 6: Question 1b Media Language

Making connections?• Evaluating media language is an evaluation of

all micro elements and how they have created meaning to inform us about genre, narrative, representations/ ideology, targeting of audiences.

• This requires us to use semiotic terminology to explain our encoding of elements and codes and conventions within our texts.

• We must also remember to discuss the preferred meaning (Hall, 1980) that we wanted our audience to DECODE.

Page 7: Question 1b Media Language

Micro Elements: Mise-en-Scene

• Mise-en-scène constitutes the key aspect of the pre-production phase of the film and can be taken to include all aspects of production design and Cinematography.

• Mise-en-Scene creates the diegetic world - the fictional space and time implied by the narrative, i.e. the world in which the story takes place.

Page 8: Question 1b Media Language

Aspects of Mise-en-Scene – video and print style

1. Location - settings, set-design and iconography

2. Character – Costume, Properties and Make Up, Actors and Gesture

3. Cinematography - Lighting and Colour

4. Layout and Page Design – colour, juxtaposition of elements.

Page 9: Question 1b Media Language

Micro Elements: Camerawork

• There are Four aspects to camerawork that you need to understand:

1.Shot Types – particularly relevant for print.

2.Camera Composition 3.Camera Movement4.Camera Angles

Page 10: Question 1b Media Language

Continuity• Establishing/Re-establishing Shot• Transitions.• The 180° Line Rule.• Action Match.• Crosscutting.• Cutaway.• Insert Shots.• Shot-Reverse Shot Structures.• Eyeline Match.

Page 11: Question 1b Media Language

Non-Continuity

1. Montage Sequence.2. Flash Back/Forward.3. Ellipsis.4. Graphic Match.

Page 12: Question 1b Media Language

“Media is communication”. Discuss the ways that you have used media language to create meanings in one of your media products.

Think of this question as the first part of your revision...