Thursday 13 September 2018

GCSE Media Key Concepts: blog task

Everything we study in GCSE Media over the next two years will be based around the theoretical framework. This means four key concepts: Language, Industries, Audience and Representation.

If you missed any of the notes from today's lesson this should help:

Language

  • The Language of Media Studies
  • How we ‘read’ media texts
  • Recognising the codes and conventions of media texts
  • Key media terms e.g. genre… denotation… connotation… narrative… 


Industries
  • The companies, organisations or regulators behind the media
  • Most aspects of the media are a commodity: something that is bought and sold. There is competition and a demand for profit.
  • Huge institutions are called multinationals e.g. News International
  • Smaller institutions can include media texts we create ourselves (blogs etc.)


Audience
  • The people who consume media products
  • How does the media influence its audience? Who holds the power?
  • How is an audience targeted? What do the audience enjoy or learn from the media product?
  • Audience research: who exactly is buying our product?

Representation
  • The people who consume media products
  • How does the media influence its audience? Who holds the power?
  • How is an audience targeted? What do the audience enjoy or learn from the media product?
  • Audience research: who exactly is buying our product?

Key Concepts homework blog task

Create a new blogpost called 'Key Concepts film poster analysis' and complete the following tasks:

1) Find a film poster of your choice (use Google images) and add it to your blog post.

2) Write an analysis of the film poster on your blog using the four key media concepts: language, industries, audience and representation.

The key questions to ask:

Language: how do we know it is a film poster? What impact do the key conventions have on the audience?

Industries: who are the companies behind the film? Who directs or stars in the film? Who is making money from this media product?

Audience: who is the target audience for this film? How can we tell?

Representation: what representation of people or groups can we find in this poster? What does it tell the audience?


Example: Splice (2009)


Language
The title and tag-line, release date and billing block (information about the Director and the production company) all follow the expected codes and conventions of a film poster. The effect created here is…

Industries
The film was produced by Dark Castle (for Universal Entertainment) who are associated with horror… It was executively produced by Guillermo del Toro who is a well known director. It was commercially successful (being the highest grossing Canadian feature film in 2010)…

Audience
This looks like it would be targeted at an audience of mixed gender (although perhaps slightly more female?) An adult age range might apply due to the 15 certificate and the content which includes hybridity and genetic experimentation…

Representation
The focal picture shows a female in a dominant position with another female confronting her. There is a male in the background which is perhaps unusual, particularly in science fiction…


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