Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Do the media ââ¬Ëconstructââ¬â¢ social reality, or does it simply report on it
It is often suggested by scholars that the world and in all its content is ambiguous, there is no universal meaning, nothing can be interpreted the same way. Opinions are constantly clashing and facts somehow constructed, or tempered during the processes of news production. News becomes the fictions of reality; it becomes a way of story telling, made to the taste of the viewer, depending on the society of course. The same stories carry different values depending where when and how the stories are broadcasted, I will be talking about this in this essay. There are two approaches to report a piece of news; the realist, purely factual no interpretations given and very clear in usage of language. This method differs to that of the constructionist, in which events or situations are carefully analysed, and I will be talking about the implication of media ââ¬Å"constructedâ⬠social reality. ââ¬Å"Leaders who disillusion their followers live shorter politician lives than who learn to represent situations to their best political advantageâ⬠; (Bennett, 2007: p.111) here Bennett is almost suggesting that audience prefer to consume politically incorrectness over the truth, which could be troubling. It is true in terms of politics that politician are not always completely faithful to their promises Scheufele sited Entmanââ¬â¢s definition of framing as ââ¬Ëa scatter of conceptualizationââ¬â¢ (1999), Conceptualization is the process of ââ¬Å"inventing or contriving an idea or explanation and formulating it mentallyâ⬠or ââ¬Å"an elaborated conceptâ⬠ââ¬Å"framing is an extension of agenda settingâ⬠it set up a specific idea for an audience to believe in, audience is somewhat fooled into accepting one side of the story, and usually, they are unable or find it difficult to accept... ... Television in British Politics: Media, Money and mediated Democracy. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. Glasser, T.L. (ed.) The Idea of Public Journalism. Chapter one. New York: Guilford Press. Luhmann, N. (2000) The Reality of the Mass Media. Cambridge: Polity Press. Richardson, J.E. (2007) Analysing Newspapers: an Approach from Critical Discourse Analysis. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Journal articles: Barnhurst, K.G. and Mutz, D. (1997) ââ¬ËAmerican journalism and the decline in event-centred reportingââ¬â¢, Journal of Communication. 47 (4): 27-53 Scheufele, D.A. (1990) ââ¬ËFraming as a theory of media effects ââ¬â¢, Journal of communications. 49 (1): 103-122 Links: AlJazeera English (2010) ââ¬ËChina ban on dog meat draw angry outcryââ¬â¢ February 08 available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZLLhd_0p_c http://www.thefreedictionary.com/conceptualization
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