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‘The Social Production of News’

  • Stuart Hall , Chas Critcher , Tony Jefferson , John Clarke und Brian Roberts
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Media Studies
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Media Studies
© 2009, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2009, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. General Introduction xiii
  4. PART ONE: STUDYING THE MEDIA
  5. SECTION 1 FOUNDATIONS
  6. Introduction 1
  7. 1 ‘Culture Industry Reconsidered’ 15
  8. 2 ‘The Medium is the Message’ 22
  9. 3 ‘Encoding/Decoding’ 28
  10. 4 ‘The Power of the Image’ 39
  11. 5 ‘The Public Sphere’ 45
  12. 6 ‘The Masses: The Implosion of the Social in the Media’ 52
  13. 7 ‘Truth and Power’ 63
  14. 8 ‘The Practice of Everyday Life’ 76
  15. 9 ‘Postscript on the Societies of Control’ 89
  16. 10 ‘Some Properties of Fields’ 94
  17. Further Reading 100
  18. Section 2: The Media and the Public Sphere
  19. Introduction 105
  20. 11 ‘Introduction to Orientalism’ 111
  21. 12 ‘Mass Culture as Woman: Modernism’s Other’ 124
  22. 13 ‘The Globalization of Communication’ 138
  23. 14 ‘An Introduction to the Information Age’ 152
  24. 15 “Not Only, But Also”: Mixedness and Media’ 165
  25. Further Reading 181
  26. Section 3: Representation
  27. 3.1 Textual Structures
  28. Introduction 187
  29. 16 ‘Programming as Sequence or Flow’ 192
  30. 17 ‘Broadcast TV Narration’ 199
  31. 18 ‘The Role of Stereotypes’ 206
  32. 19 ‘Genre, Representation and Soap Opera’ 213
  33. 20 ‘Rhetoric, Play, Performance’ 224
  34. 21 ‘Database as a Symbolic Form’ 236
  35. Further Reading 248
  36. 3.2 The Politics of Representation
  37. Introduction 251
  38. 22 ‘Fictions and Ideologies: The Case of Situation Comedy’ 255
  39. 23 ‘New Ethnicities’ 269
  40. 24 ‘Skin Flicks on the Racial Border: Pornography, Exploitation, and Interracial Lust’ 277
  41. 25 ‘Between the Blues and the Blues Dance: Some Soundscapes of the Black Atlantic’ 291
  42. 26 ‘Queering Home or Domesticating Deviance? Interrogating Gay Domesticity Through Lifestyle Television’ 302
  43. Further Reading 314
  44. 3.3 Feminist Readings
  45. Introduction 319
  46. 27 ‘Survival Skills and Daydreams’ 323
  47. 28 ‘Reading the Slender Body’ 330
  48. 29 ‘The Role of Soap Opera in the Development of Feminist Television Scholarship’ 341
  49. 30 ‘Post-Feminism and Popular Culture’ 350
  50. 31 ‘Playing the Game: Young Girls Performing Femininity in Video Game Play’ 362
  51. Further Reading 373
  52. Section 4: Audiences
  53. 4.1 ‘Effects’ Debates
  54. Introduction 379
  55. 32 ‘On the Social Effects of Television’ 384
  56. 33 ‘The Television Audience: A Revised Perspective’ 389
  57. 34 ‘A Sociology of Media Power: Key Issues in Audience Reception Research’ 405
  58. 35 ‘From Bad Research to Good – A Guide for the Perplexed’ 418
  59. Further Reading 430
  60. 4.2 The Politics of Reading
  61. Introduction 435
  62. 36 ‘Reading the Romance’ 440
  63. 37 ‘Wanted: Audiences. On the Politics of Empirical Audience Studies’ 451
  64. 38 ‘The Oppositional Gaze: Black Female Spectators’ 462
  65. 39 ‘There’s Something Queer Here’ 471
  66. 40 ‘Banal Transnationalism: The Difference that Television Makes’ 481
  67. Further Reading 492
  68. Section 5: Media and Everyday Life
  69. Introduction 497
  70. 41 ‘Behind Closed Doors: Video Recorders in the Home’ 502
  71. 42 ‘Media, Meaning and Everyday Life’ 514
  72. 43 ‘What’s “Home” Got to Do with It? Contradictory Dynamics in the Domestication of Technology and the Dislocation of Domesticity’ 523
  73. 44 ‘No Dead Air! The iPod and the Culture of Mobile Listening’ 536
  74. Further Reading 551
  75. PART TWO: CASE STUDIES
  76. Section 6: ‘Reality’ Television
  77. Introduction 557
  78. 45 ‘Reality TV and Social Perversion’ 561
  79. 46 ‘The Rise of Reality TV’ 573
  80. 47 ‘Public and Private Bodies’ 588
  81. 48 ‘Celebrity, Social Mobility and the Future of Reality TV’ 598
  82. 49 ‘Teaching Us to Fake It: The Ritualized Norms of Television’s “Reality” Games’ 610
  83. Further Reading 624
  84. Section 7: News and Documentary
  85. Introduction 629
  86. 50 ‘News Values and News Production’ 635
  87. ‘The Social Production of News’ 648
  88. 52 ‘Politicizing the Personal: Women’s Voices in British Television Documentaries’ 656
  89. 53 ‘News Media and the Globalization of the Public Sphere’ 671
  90. 54 ‘Bad News from Israel’ 690
  91. 55 ‘Picturizing Science: The Science Documentary as Multimedia Spectacle’ 706
  92. Further Reading 721
  93. Section 8: Advertising and Promotional Culture
  94. Introduction 725
  95. 56 ‘Advertising: The Magic System’ 730
  96. 57 ‘Advertising, Magazine Culture, and the “New Man”’ 736
  97. 58 ‘Soft-soaping Empire: Commodity Racism and Imperial Advertising’ 747
  98. 59 ‘The Promotional Condition of Contemporary Culture’ 763
  99. 60 ‘Social Communication in Advertising’ 772
  100. Further Reading 786
  101. Section 9: New Technologies, New Media?
  102. Introduction 791
  103. 61 ‘Cyberspace and the World we Live in’ 796
  104. 62 ‘The Work of Being Watched: Interactive Media and the Exploitation of Self-Disclosure’ 812
  105. 63 ‘The MP3 as Cultural Artifact’ 825
  106. 64 ‘Beyond Anonymity, or Future Directions for Internet Identity Research’ 839
  107. 65 ‘Cultural Studies and New Media’ 854
  108. Further Reading 870
  109. Acknowledgements 872
  110. Index of Names 879
  111. Subject Index 882
Heruntergeladen am 1.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781474473231-071/html?lang=de
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