Answer No 4
Answer No 4
Answer No 4
If
you don’t agree with his thesis, what evidence could he muster that would
convince you that he’s right? What evidence would you provide to counter his
argument?
Hall has presented in his theory that producers of the message generally encode
the dominant parts to be communicated. This gives rise to hegemony.
The cultural or political dilutions are the root reasons behind this encoding by
media houses. The people who lead act as catalysts in the diffusion of the
dominant ideas/ concepts.
But this illustration can be challenged or counter argued because audience are
having to interpret the message with their preconceived notions and extent of
flexibility.
Thus, the greater chance of encoding by audience may not be favorable but rather
unacceptable to them.
Firstly it is necessary to recognise that the encoding decoding model has much older
theoretical roots. One of the main theoretical roots of the model (critical theory) referred
to the post 1933 emigration of scholars from the Marxist school of applied Social
Research in Frankfurt to the United States (Mcquail: 2000). The school was established to
understand the failures of Marxism, and Stuart Hall’s essay examined the mass media as
central to the culture of capitalism with meaningful discourse, this is relevant to the
success of the model which appears critically popular in looking at capitalism with a
predominant media.
Secondly the theory readdressed the themes of the Use and Gratifications theory
examining audience power over the media rather then mediated effects on the audience
(Katz: 1959). The theoretical study later concluded that audiences use the media to fulfil
there own needs and gratifications (Katz, E., Blumler, J. G., & Gurevitch, M.: 1974). Hall’s
theory represents a similar model with elegant simplicity, to make it a key text, (Mcquail:
2002). Importantly Hall’s model focuses on groups rather then the individual which is
more useful for looking at mass communications dominance due to social class and
cultural heritage. Both the political and theoretical foundations of the model have
implications on its relevance today as its usefulness is paramount to a mass media
dominated society and the driving relationship between audience and media.
“The institution -societal relations of production must pass into and through modes of
language for its products to be realised. This initiates a further differentiated moment, in
which the formal rules of discourse and language operate. Before this message can have
an effect it must first be meaningfully decoded. It is the set of decoded meaning which
have an effect, influence entertain, instruct or persuade with complex perceptual
cognitive, ideological or behavioural consequences” (Hall, 1974: 3).
Hall (1974) suggests four decoded meanings from this model, the dominant code of
preferred meanings, the professional code – transmitting a message signified within in a
hegemonic manner, the negotiated code of adapted and oppositional elements and the
oppositional code, clear understanding but with a connotative inflection and rejection
for audience, (Mcqual: 2002). This segregation of groups was tested by David Morley’s
The Nationwide Audience in 1980 which complimented Hall’s research but importantly
gave birth to second generation ethnographic research. This was praised by Morley
(1992) where he described how Halls model gave rise to decode media messages and
sparked emphasis toward a new phase of qualitative audience research, gender realities
and media consumption.
Ethnographic research predominant in the 80’s examined how television was a social
resource in family dynamics and the relation of media in everyday life, rather then
decoding one programme through a single medium. Fish wrote that “one studies the
every day life of a group, and relates the use of (a reception of) a programme or a
medium to it” (1979: 329). This quality of research transcends further into areas such as
gender and communities in which Hall’s model can not disseminate.
After the third generation of audience research, Schroder (1994) described the turn
towards ethnography and the everyday, as a threat to write the media as the focus of
research out of existence. Political research addressed later, will demonstrate this to be
untrue and encoding/decoding remains useful in social and cultural class on a broad
scale.
Nightingale (1996) criticized the model for the assumption that only dominant culture is
produced through television and the modernity of the model should recognise the
cultural hegemony distributed through society. Fiske (1997) described, the
characterization of the television text as a site of a struggle between dominant
ideologies working to produce a closed text by closing off the opportunities it offers to
resistive readings, and the diversity of audiences who, if they are to make the text
popular, are constantly working to open it up to their readings. Audience participation
has increased dramatically in contemporary television, addressing the dominant reading
and offering opportunities for varied outcomes. The rising popularity of reality TV shows
is a good example of a larger audience participation, which will be addressed later on.
Before looking at the changing media landscape and the issues that affect the use of the
decoding model in the close present. It is first necessary to pay attention to David
Morley. In The Study of the Nationwide Audience, Morley (1980) described ‘members of
a given sub-culture tend to share a cultural orientation towards decoding messages in
certain ways, similarly Hall (1981b) described ‘individual “readings” of messages will be
framed by shared cultural formations and practices’ (p.51). This study used Stuart Hall’s
encoding model and successfully identified dominant, negotiated and oppositional
readings based on cultural background. The limitations of this were later noted by David
Morley (1992) in his critical postscript in Television Audiences and Cultural Studies
where he acknowledged his terms of class (middle and lower) are descriptive labels that
do not divulge the detailed ethnography of the people studied. He also describes The
Nationwide Audience as scratching the surface of cultural practises that could range
from religion to biology. Therefore we can acknowledge that the model lacks the detail
desired to penetrate the cultural depth of the audience, but the model can disseminate
by social and cultural class on a broad scale.
The Nationwide Audience was defined in relation to texts rather then mediums (Holmes:
2005) but audience medium interaction was also examined in Morley’s postscript.
Critically the audience medium changes the way the audience receives the text. The
internet has been the largest rising social medium in contemporary technology and is
very different from television. “Television is considered to be an acoustic medium like
radio, in which sound represents the privately experienced equivalent of a social world
characterized from all directions” ( Holmes: 2005, p.114). The Internet presents a world
of information, a virtual reality linked with broadcast networks, interactive
communication, and a definitive need for the audience to participate. The internet and
online broadcasting were not present at the time of the original study forming an
argument that Hall’s model is outdated as it does not account for changing mediums
and New Media content consumed by the audience.
New genre has allowed reflection on old mediums acquainted to their ontological
power (Holmes: 2005). An example is the spectacular increase in active audience
participation in reality TV, founded on a principle of imaginary substitution; and
audiences viewing a representation of themselves. Using Nightingale’s assumption that
the model assumes only dominant culture is produced through television; reality TV
rebuffs a dominant understanding through the audience participation.
Critically as Hall’s model arguably only accounts for a dominant ideology, it has
extremely limited use in looking at audience participation and influence. The ITV’s X
factor audience has an estimated 10 million viewers, and there are various reality TV
voting shows such as big brother, that aren’t just primetime TV, but can dominate the
front page of many tabloid magazines reaching a predominantly larger circulation of
people then television. Third generation audience research best describes the audience
participation, in there active role in the media in determining the outcome of the
represented. Social constructivism defines reality TV, and a dominant hegemony is
arguable defeated.