A2 Sociology Mass Media
All key words in the topics that are covered in AQA sociology Mass Media, I'm making these to help me revise, if it helps you too great!!
- Created by: Sam
- Created on: 05-01-12 13:28
Ownership and control
Transnational corporations (TNC): a large bussiness with operations and outlets in a range of countries.
Cross-media ownership: when a company owns a range of media forms, such as TV and newspapers.
Media conglomerate: an organisation that owns large numbers of companies in various mass media, such as television, rasio, publishing and film.
Vertical integration: when a media company controls every stage of media production, e.g. it makes and broadcasts TV programmes.
Synergy: integration of different media forms.
Market mechanism: of the media, a Pluralist argument that the media sontent is deterined by audiences through supply and demand.
Ownership and control (continued)
Old media: analogue media such as cinema, 1-5 television channels, and print media e.g. newspapers.
New media: digital media such as internet, PCs and digital TV.
Ideological state apparatus (ISA): a collection of institutions that transmit ideology that supports the existing social arrangements.
Legitimiation: (Neo-marxist) term to describe how the ideology of the ruling class is made to seem fair, just and legitimate.
Hegemony: the ideological control that the ruling-class elite have over the masses. (Neo-marxist term)
False consciousness: the illusion instilled into the working class that the capitalist system is fair for everyone in society.
Globalisation, culture and the mass media
Globalisation: increased world interconnectedness throuhgh the flow of nations, people, ideas, technology and culture in general.
Cultural imperialism: when the cultural output of one religion dominates the cultural ouput of other regions, especially the aggressive promotion of Western culture, specifically American culture, as superior to non-Western cultures. "Coca-cola-isation" or "McDonalisation" are sometimes used to describe this process.
Public sphere: a real or virtual place where people come together as equal participants in democratic discussions.
Public sphere is a concept made by Habbermas, which he defines as the area of social life that is not controlled by governemnts or the market
News and current affairs
News values: the criteria used by journalists and editors to decide if a story is newsworthy.
Dumbing down: the idea that news has become more populist and more sensational, less intelligent and less informative.
Narrative: the idea that stories should have a beginning, middle and end. Journalists and editors try to fit stories into this structure.
News management: spin; the way that governments and others try to manipulate the presentation of news to show themselves in a favourable light.
News diary: a journalist's planner of future newsworthy events.
Social construct: something that is defined by society and that changes according to time and place.
Audiences/crime and violence
Homogeneous audiences: an assumption that audiences have common social characteristics and react in similar ways to media texts.
Opinion leaders: influential individual in socal networks.
Heterogeneous audiences: a view that audiences have very different social characteristics and react differently to media texts.
Moral panic: when society reacts against perceived deviance, because of media representations.
secondary deviance: when crackdowns pm deviance produce further deviance in response to action by police and others.
Deviancy amplification: when the actions of the media or police cayse more crime to be detected or committed.
Representations & stereotypes
Stereotype: a preconceived, standardised and oversimplified impression of the characteristsics that typify a person, and attutude based on such a preconception.
Patriarchal: male dominace of society, and the means by which this is transmitted from generation to generation, e.g the media.
Recpetion analysis: an analysis of how people interpret and use media texts in different ways.
Ethnicity, racism and stereotypes/ sexuality and d
Tokenism: the inclusion of a figure who may be black, female, gay, and so on into a media ext to show that the text is not racist, sexist, etc.
Camp: depiction of gay people as effeminate, mincing men with high voices.
Heterosexual gaze: the idea that homosexual issues are presented by the media from a heterosexual viewpoint.
(No key words on class and age)
Old and new media
Technological determinism: the concept that a society's technology determines its cultural values, social structure or history.
Interactivity: when audiences and participants play an active role in creating and responding to media content.
Virtual community: a community that is formed through digital interaction and that has no physical existance e.g. world of warcraft.
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