Resources

A Section

Expansions

Media convergence                                                                                                                                       

If you want to understand how media are affecting the way people use language, you’ve got to understand the phenomena of media convergence. ‘Convergence’ means the ‘coming together’ of different things. Usually when we talk about media convergence, we are talking about the coming together of different technologies – sometimes called technological convergence. Nowadays media such as newspapers, television, social media are all available though digital devices such as computers and smartphones. Even things that you may not have considered media before – such as your car or your refrigerator – are now communicating with you because technologies like computers and television screens are built into them. In fact, with the internet of things, more and more technologies in our daily lives are converging. Another way media are converging is the concentration of different media under the control of a few big companies. For example, a company such as Google controls the Google search engine, You Tube, Gmail, and many other apps. The writer Siva Vaidhyanathan refers to the power that Google has over so many aspects of our lives as The Googlization of Everything.

What are some advantages and disadvantages of media convergence? Can you add to the list below?

Advantages of media convergence

Disadvantages of media convergence

1. It makes things more convenient.
2.
3.

1. It gives big companies too much power.
2.
3

Media richness

The idea of ‘media richness’ comes from the field of communication studies, where it is used to refer to the ability for media to represent the information that is transmitted over it. Face-to-face communication is regarded as ‘rich’ because receivers of communication have access not just to the words spoken, but also the speaker’s tone of voice, his or her gestures, facial expression, posture, and even information that come from things like the kind of clothes he or she is wearing. Text-based communication is considered ‘lean’ because many of the cues we use in face-to-face communication are not available to us. From the point of view of discourse analysis, we can think of media richness as a function of the different modes a particular medium is able to represent. When looked at this way, the idea of media richness can actually be more complicated than it seems. For example, we might think of a handwritten letter as a particularly ‘lean’ medium because when we read it we cannot see the writer’s face or hear his or her voice. But there are other modes in the letter that are not usually available in face-to face communication, and these modes can actually be very expressive (such as handwriting, drawings, the way the words are arranged on the page, the texture or smell of the paper that is used). Furthermore, just because a medium is ‘rich’ does not mean that it is ‘better’. Sometimes people prefer ‘lean’ media (such as text messages) because they do not have to worry about communicating with and controlling lots of different modes such as their facial expressions. In other words, lean media usually have lower ‘transaction costs’. And just because a medium is ‘lean’ doesn’t mean that people can’t be very expressive when they use it. Media scholar Joseph Walther, in fact, noted that sometimes when using ‘lean’ media, people are more willing to express their emotions and reveal secrets, a phenomenon he called ‘hyperpersonal communication’.

Rank the media below based on how rich you think they are. Then explain your rankings to another person.

Television         WhatsApp        Voice telephone           Video-chat              Print newspapers       

Audience segregation and audience segmentation

Audience segregation and audience segmentation are two separate but related ideas. Audience segregation is the ability to present different performances (and so different versions of the ‘self’) to different people because we are able to separate our audiences in a way that one audience is not able to see the same performance as the other. The idea comes from Goffman’s famous book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, in which he compares social interaction to theatre performances. Theatres have technological affordances (such as curtains) which allow actors to act one way for the audience in the seats and another way with their fellow actors offstage. Media such as telephones, chat programs and social media sites also have affordances that help us to separate out different audiences, and to ‘draw a curtain’ over some of our communications so that certain people don’t have access to them.

Audience segmentation is an idea from marketing. It refers to the way marketers divide audiences into sub-groups, each with particular characteristics (such as age, gender, interest or experience). In the era in which print and broadcast media were dominant, advertisers segmented audiences based on the kinds of content or media they thought different people would use. They advertised products for ‘housewives’ (back in the 1950’s when this term was still used) during soap operas, products for kids during cartoons, and products for men during sports programs. This kind of segmentation, of course, helped to perpetuate stereotypes because it conditioned women, men and kids to like certain kinds of products. In the internet age, advertisers are still conditioning us, but in different ways. Now advertisements are targeted to smaller and more specific segments of the population, and even to individuals based on their particular web browsing habits. The internet has also helped advertisers to segregate audiences better, so often people are unaware of the kinds of advertisements and other content that people who are different from them (demographically or ideologically) are exposed to. This is especially dangerous when it comes to political advertising on social media because, not only do people disagree with those with different political views, but they have trouble understanding why those people have those views because they have not been exposed to the same kind of content than they are.  

Citizen journalism

Citizen journalism is the collection, analysis and dissemination of news by people who are not professional journalists. While it has always been possible for ordinary people to gather and disseminate news by word of mouth, or to report things that they find out to journalists to be published or broadcast, the idea of citizen journalism really didn’t take off until the invention of the internet, which allowed people to publish content themselves.

There are two main kinds of technologies that have contributed to citizen journalism. The first are the cameras that are embedded into almost all mobile phones sold nowadays. When everyone has a camera, it becomes easy for people to document the things they see and produce ‘eyewitness’ accounts for others. The second technology is social media, which allow people to disseminate the content that they collect to a wide audience. On social media sites, other people, apart from the person who has posted the original content, also play a part in producing the news at they share, comment on and sometimes alter what was originally posted.

Among the most famous examples of citizen journalism are those that have documented  police brutality, especially against minorities. In the United States, cell-phone videos of police involved shootings and other violence has made the systematic racism against African Americans more visible.

At the same time, there are drawbacks to citizen journalism. Since citizen generated content is not subject to the same kind of journalistic standards and editorial review processes of mainstream journalism, the potential for the spread of ‘fake news’ increases. People also often use their newfound potential to record the behaviour of others as an excuse to engage in public shaming. Ordinary individuals ‘behaving badly’ in public is not necessarily newsworthy, but on social media, videos of such incidents can attract an enormous amount of attention. While sometimes these videos serve the purpose of sparking useful public debates about, for example, racism or public responsibility, they can also often have a negative impact on the lives and reputations of those who have been videoed disproportionate to the seriousness of their alleged transgressions.

  • Search the internet for examples of citizen journalism that has exposed police brutality and think about how these videos affect how we hold people in authority accountable.
  • Find some examples of ‘public shaming’ on the internet. What were the positive and negative consequences of these videos being disseminated?

B Section

Featured Scholars

Marshall McLuhan

Marshall McLuhan Tote Bag

Marshall McLuhan was a Canadian professor who is regarded as one of the most famous media scholars of the 20th century. He coined the term global village many years before the internet was invented. He is also famous for saying ‘the medium is the message’. His most well known book is Understanding Media: The extensions of man(1964).

Featured video

Watch this YouTube video of a lecture that Marshall McLuhan gave in 1977 explaining his phrase ‘the medium is the message’.

Gunther Kress and Theo van Leeuwen

Reading Images. The Grammar Of Visual Design, Books & Stationery ...

Gunther Kress and Theo van Leeuwen are pioneers in the study of multimodality. With their 1996 book Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design, they ushered in an era in which discourse analysts could no longer ignore the non-verbal aspects of texts. Kress, who died in 2019, was a Professor of Education, and so a lot of his work focused on the application of ideas about multimodality to teaching and learning. Van Leeuwen came out of the world of media; he worked as a director, producer and scriptwriter for both film and television before going into academia. Both Kress  and van Leeuwen were students of the British linguist Michael Halliday, and they adapted his theories of functional linguistics to the study of images, colour, music, and other modes.

Featured video

Watch this YouTube video in which Professor Gunther Kress explains the concept of multimodality.

Erving Goffman

Erving Goffman and the Social Action Theory - Exploring your mind

The idea of participation frameworks comes from the work of the Canadian-born sociologist Erving Goffman. Goffman was interested in the what is called ‘micro-sociology’, which is the close analysis of the way people interact with other people in everyday life. His most famous book is The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, in which he talks about how people put on performances for one another in the course of their everyday affairs. The notion of participation frameworks comes from the book Forms of Talk, which is the only book Goffman wrote where he explicitly analyses media talk.

Featured video

Watch this YouTube video in which Professor Paul Lambert discusses Goffman’s notion of participation frameworks.

George Lakoff

George Lakoff is a cognitive linguist who is especially interested in the cognitive origins of metaphors and their social effects. His most famous book is Metaphors We Live By, which he wrote together with is colleague Mark Johnson. More recently, Lakoff has turned his attention to the language of politics, pointing out the ways political parties use metaphors and narrative framing to win the loyalty of their members and portray members of other parties as unpatriotic, weak, or incompetent. You can read about this work in his book Don’t Think of an Elephant! Know your values and frame the debate.

Featured video

Watch this YouTube video in which Professor George Lakoff talks about persuasion in the context of climate change.

Antonio Gramsci

Antonio Gramsci was a Marxist philosopher of the early twentieth century who is responsible for developing the theory of cultural hegemony. His most famous writings include his Prison Notebooks. The theory cultural hegemony argues that governments and other powerful institutions maintain their power mostly through controlling culture (including the media), by which they are able to make their ideology synonymous with ‘common sense’ and thus maintain the status quo.  Gramsci’s ideas have been enormously influential in the fields of critical media studies and critical discourse analysis.

Featured video

Watch the YouTube video about the tactics of the organization AdBusters and the practice of culture jamming.

C Section

Supplementary Activities

How do new media resemble old media? How are they different?

In unit B1 we talked about the notion of remediation, the phenomena of old media being absorbed into new media. Compare the new media listed below with the old media that they have remediated. Think about how the old media and the new media are similar or different, and what the consequences of these similarities and differences are for users and for society as a whole.

Media

How are they similar?

How are they different?

Letters – Emails

Phone – WhatsApp/WeChat

Television – YouTube

Radio -- Podcasts

ASMR Videos

Here’s the video for the last Activity in unit C2 (Table C2.2)

 Now look at another ASMR video and answer the following questions:

How does the vlogger create effects through the interaction of the audio and visual channels?
How do each of the effects make you feel? How can you account for these feelings?
How does the vlogger use the objects in the video to create a social identity for herself? (What do these objects index?)
How does  the vlogger create a relationship with her audience (interpersonal meaning) though things like gaze and the tone of her voice?
Why do you think videos like this are so popular?

What’s in my purse?

‘Cash me ousside!’

In unit B6 we talked about an episode of the Dr Phil Show in which Dr Phil interviews a 13 year old girl. You can watch the episode below.

  1. Watch the video from timestamp 0.55. First try to decide what kinds of participant roles (for example addressee, third party, over-hearer, eavesdropper) the different participants are occupying. Remember that people can assume multiple participant roles in an interaction and often they can change roles based on the way other participants shift footing. Second, write down what sorts of social roles (such as hero, villain, therapist, confidant, etc.) that are involved with the aid of these participant roles. Be prepared to justify your answers.
  2. Person

    Participant roles

    Social roles

    Dr Phil

    Girl

    Mother

    Studio Audience

  3. Notice places when the participants shift footing, changing the participation structure of the interaction. What do they do to signal these changes in footing?

How news outlets cover protests

The way different news outlets cover protests can differ based on their ideological orientation.

In May of 2019, mass protests erupted across the United States against police brutality directed towards African Americans, sparked by the killing of a man named George Floyd by a police officer in Minnesota.

Watch the two videos below, one from the conservative news channel Fox News, and the other from the independent news program Democracy Now.

Make a list of the differences in the way they portray the protests, including what they choose to report on, who speaks on the broadcast, the different words they use to describe what happened, the images they show, and any evaluative language they use.

Video 1: Fox News

Fox News reporter attacked by protesters: A mob targeted us

Video 2: Democracy Now

"It Was Murder": Minneapolis Demands Charges

D Section

Other useful readings on media and mediation

Gee, J. P. (2015) The discourse analysis of games. In R.H. Jones, A. Chik, and C.A. Hafner. Discourse and digital practices (pp. 18-27). London: Routledge.
In this book chapter the famous discourse analysit James Paul Gee uses the idea of affordances to analyse video games.

Jenkins, H. (2006). Convergence culture: Where old and new media collide. New York NYU Press.
This is the book where Henry Jenkins talks about convergence culture.

Jones, R. (2018, January 14). Who is mediating whom? Language and New Media Blog.
In this blog post, Rodney Jones talks about how computers use us as much as we use them.

Wells, J. L., & Wong, F. (2012). Mediated Discourse Analysis. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics. Wiley.
This encyclopaedia entry gives a brief introduction to mediated discourse analysis.