REPRESENTATION
By definition,
all media texts are re-presentations of reality. This means that
they are intentionally composed, lit, written, framed, cropped, captioned,
branded, targeted and censored by their producers, and that they are entirely
artificial versions of the reality we perceive around us. When studying
the media it is vital to remember this - every media form, from a home video
to a glossy magazine, is a representation of someone's concept of existence,
codified into a series of signs and symbols which can be read by an audience.
However, it is important to note that without the media, our perception
of reality would be very limited, and that we, as an audience, need these
artificial texts to mediate our view of the world, in other words we need
the media to make sense of reality. Therefore representation is a fluid,
two-way process: producers position a text somewhere in relation to reality
and audiences assess a text on its relationship to reality.
Extension/Restriction
of Experience of Reality
By giving audiences
information, media texts extend experience of reality. Every time you see
a wildlife documentary, or read about political events in a country on the
other side of the world, or watch a movie about a historical event, you
extend your experience of life on this planet. However, because the producers
of the media text have selected the information we receive, then our experience
is restricted: we only see selected highlights of the lifestyle of the creatures
portrayed in the wildlife documentary, the editors and journalists decree
which aspects of the news events we will read about, and the movie producers
telescope events and personalities to fit into their parameters.
Truth
or Lies?
Media representations
- and the extent to which we accept them - are a very political issue, as
the influence the media exerts has a major impact on the way we view the
world. By viewing media representations our prejudices can be reinforced
or shattered.
Generally,
audiences accept that media texts are fictional to one extent or another
- we have come a long way from the mass manipulation model of the 1920s
and 1930s. However, as we base our perception of reality on what we see
in the media, it is dangerous to suppose that we don't see elements of truth
in media texts either.
The study of
representation is about decoding the different layers of truth/fiction/whatever.
In order to fully appreciate the part representation plays in a media text
you must consider
- Who produced
it?
- What/who
is represented in the text?
- How is that
thing represented?
- Why was
this particular representation (this shot, framed from this angle, this
story phrased in these terms, etc) selected, and what might the alternatives
have been?
- What frame
of reference does the audience use when understanding the representation?
Analysing
Representation
The analysis
of different sorts of representation forms an important part of Media Studies.
The factors of representation most commonly addressed are
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