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CMNS 130 Review CMNS 130 Course Objectives • To provide a map to navigate the field of communication studies – history & political economy • 130 outlines how media work, how they are shaped by and shaping the economic, political and social worlds around us – Society and technology • To identify different perspectives on contemporary controversies • To teach the design of effective arguments in academic writing in this discipline Key Characteristics of Mass Communication ( wk 1) 1. Message produced in complex organizations ( sender) • • • 2. Formally constituted institutions Rule based With ‘specialist’ vocations/professions Message fixed in some form with information and symbolic content ( technology of delivery is either in digital bits or commodity form) (material) Message is sent/transmitted or diffused widely via a technological medium 3. Newspaper, magazine, CD or videocassette, radio, television, satellite or Internet 4. 5. Message is delivered rapidly over great space Message reaches large groups of different people simultaneously or within a short period of time( mass audience of receivers) Message is primarily one-way, not two way, although this is now being challenged at the margins 6. • STUDY AID: COMPARE AGAINST TABLE 2.1 PAGE 14 CC The Second National Policy • like the railroad, communication seen as important for the transmission and reception of ideas, goods and services throughout Canada • central to: • Western settlement • Economic infrastructure • Social development – Much early spending by the Canadian State was to connect cities, peoples and markets • rail, hydroelectric power, telegraph, post system, heavy regulation of telephones to ensure extension of service, and provision of public radio – An early Tariff Wall until the 1930s to stimulate national business and manufacture ( See CC: 26-30) A Multi Party Pact • The Second National Policy sustained high political consensus • Overspill of US radio signals and predatory competition, combined with the social needs of Canadian citizens led to creation of the Aird Committee and unanimous resolution to create a public radio corporation – Widespread public movement’s rallying cry was: ‘The State or the United States’ ( Graham Spry: see Spry foundation www.com.umontreal.ca/spry • A national royal commission studied the “National Development of Arts and Letters” ( Massey Commission) and argued for a national interest in unity and identity in 1952-- values embedded in successive broadcast acts since with multi party consensus until the 1990s Framing the Canadian Media History • The Mass Media were seen through the lense of a history of ‘cultural nationalism’, focussed on sending, and receiving Canadian information, ideas and entertainment • But, they were also seen through a lense of fear of fascism ( CC: 52) – That new technologies like radio could make the individual part of a mass, undifferentiated, unsupported, and easy prey for authoritarian appeals. – That “mass” media would inevitably carry “low” social status Contemporary Commercial Press • Is transition of control from Ruler, to Political Party to Business? ( Chomsky and Herman) Newspapers and the Rise of Democracy in Canada • ( from colonial dependents to commercial independence) • Earliest colonial papers ( Halifax) in late 1700s were licenced by the British Crown in the colonies • Given news from the Imperial Country and local Lieutenant Governor ( so served as agent for Crown) • Slowly, allied with political parties ( early 1800s) some of them republican pressing for: – No taxation without representation – Representation by population ( whig and tory parties) From Colonial to Independent Partisan Press • Party papers ( sometime called factional papers) took money from loyalists and resisted pre publication censorship • Covered the rebellion of 1839 in Lower and Upper Canada • One editor: Etienne Parent of the Le Canadien jailed • Famous Case: Joseph Howe, Nova Scotia 1835 ( read Kesterton’s History of Journalism In Canada, page 20-22) Principal Differences • Libertarian Media • State must not intervene • Freedom of expression is absolute • Ideal type: books, newspapers, magazines, also internet • Watchdog Role ( stop abuse) • Social Responsibility Media • State may regulate – – – – • • • To protect undersupply To protect against harm or offense To ensure universal access To promote effective, fair competition Freedom of Expression is limited only when public interest is at stake Ideal type: radio or TV Acts Fourth Estate: ( like legislative, judiciary, executive) may generate policy recommendations Critical Theories of the Press • From critical political economy – Marx: in every epoch, the ruling ideas are the ideas of the ruling class ( courseware, normative theories, page 384) – Media are central to the operation of capitalism • they sell goods and services • They carry economic news • They are important for coordinating supply and demand • So essential to economic system, they are controlled by the bourgeoisie, or ruling elites Neo-Marxian views – Argue oligopoly forecloses diversity – AJ Liebling: Freedom of the Press belongs to those who own one. – That is, the structure of ownership and control if very concentrated in the hands of a few, runs the risk that the gatekeepers may freeze out certain ideas in the desire to maximize profits ( see custom courseware, p. 389 normative theories) – The media become tools to maintain the dominant ideology of capitalist power Stephen Brooks – Reminds us that the media are agents of socialization – Set the contours of modern political discourse – Agents of social learning • The process of acquiring knowledge, values, and beliefs about the world and ourselves • Contribute to what Walter Lippmann called ‘the pictures in our heads’ ( CC: 183) • Especially powerful agents of ideology on issues where personal experience is unavailable Propaganda • Definition: – The deliberate attempt to persuade people to think and behave in a desired way consistent with benefiting those doing the persuasion • Includes advertising, public relations, and other forms • Includes censorship – More formally: an organized program of publicity to propagate a doctrine or practice Common Elements of War Propaganda • The Big Lie – – • Demonizing the Other – – • Private Jessica Lynch raid Tight communication control – • Deck of 52 most wanted of Saddam Hussein’s colleagues Axis of Evil: Iraq, Syria, N. Korea Issuance of Disinformation – • War atrocity stories ( the Operation Desert Storm, 1991, Kuwaiti babies) WWI the human soap factory ( 1919) Embedding journalists, news pools, joint bureau Coercion, pre and post censorship or other uses of totalitarian power Media as Democratic Propaganda • Coercion of citizens is not direct • Ethical and moral claim of the democratic propagandist is itself to be debated • Engagement with the propaganda techniques is open…tends to be ‘enlightened’ ( voluntary, majoritarian) and systemic ( not individual). Democratic Propaganda II • Mainstream media do not set out to control or persuade,but that the effect is cumulative – Expressions may be banal: • Frame all news around conflict/negative framework • Consumer fantasies • Male, ethnocentric language or values • Little proof of a conspiracy or that owners collude • “it reminds us that persuasion works best when worming our way into our unconsciousness yet leaving intact the perception we have made our choices independently” ( Fleras, 2003). Advertising And the Selling of Consumption • Ubiquitous • Intrusive • Intensive – Without precedent in any historical epoch – Part of a continuum of persuasion in democratic propaganda Advertisers Clout on the News • Canadian Association of Journalists: – We will not give favoured treatment to advertisers and special interests. We must resist their efforts to influence the news. ( ethic guidelines – Prohibit acceptance of swag: gifts • Structural separation of editorial and ad departments • But journalists aware of the need to sell and maximize audiences Advertisers “Censor?” Classic cases: 1)Advertisers boycott: withdrawal after wardrobe malfunction, Disney withdrawing from offensive contents, Bill Maher 2)Efforts to directly influence content 1)Kingston Whig Standard: lost $100 k after realestate agents pulled ads when article about direct sales published ( Russell: 52) 2)Tied selling: advertorials 3)The Bay and National Post Social Issues in Advertising • Is there a social responsibility accepted? – Yes; the Advertising Standards Council of Canada sets out several principles – Yes, Advertising directed at Children is strongly regulated around the world • Prohibited for very young children • Type of appeal restricted • In each generation, there are issues of representation in advertising hotly contested: gender, age, race, sexual orientation Definition of Advertising • How consumers become aware of potential goods or services to buy ( CC: 339). • Thus: integral to persuasion • In business, one of the costs of marketing Two Ideological Perspectives • Libertarian • Essential to inform consumers • Builds demand for products • Enables sellers to maximize sales and reduce costs • Essential for efficiency of the market • • • • Reform Liberal Information is biassed Creates wants not needs Leads to oversupply of goods • Passed on in costs to consumers thus inflationary • J.K. Galbraith There is no free lunch • Ad supported media appear ‘free’ to consumers • But, the costs of ads are passed on in the end price of the good • Marketing and ad costs can reach 1015% ( almost like a private ministry of information GST) Market Research • Advertising is built on market intelligence • Identification of potential consumers by demographics, behavioral and attitudinal factors • Endebted to social psychology – Study of what attracts, appeals, provides a sense of identify, pleasure • The trend to “passive people meters” and universal barcodes: tv/exposure to ads/retail purchases try to simulate • “complete data shadows” of consumers Consumerism, Identity and Resistance • Difference may be aestheticized, with the effect of assimilating or emulating “Otherness for its exchange value” CC 390 • Difference as a marketing tool attempts to strip it of all social and political antagonisms • Allows both the reinforcement of traditional identities based on age, religion, taste an ethnicity while facilitating the production of new, increasingly narrow identities based on taste and lifestyle: a culture of naricissim? A culture defined by fragmented public sphericules? The Peculiar Nature of the Media Commodity • Ephemeral: high risk • Renewable: consumption does not destroy availability of use to another • Characterised by high creative labour costs which, as yet,cannot be wholly substituted by labour • The paradox in media: – Costs or producing the first prototype are high, but very low to zero for additional copies – This is called zero marginal cost: suggests a difficulty in trapping exchange value The Public Good Problem • Implies media goods may tend to be ‘freely’ exchanged: eg. MP3 file sharing • Businesses respond by creating laws to ‘trap’ exchange value: eg. Fundamental basis of entertainment law is Intellectual Property – Which establishes a monopoly for the creator for 70 years on products of the mind Rationale for Intervention - Doctrine of national sovereignty(spectrum) Natural Monopoly ( spectrum) Market Failure - History of spectrum chaos Other case of Market Failure - Diseconomies of scale in certain productions - 40% time spent with drama - Average US drama $1.2-2 million US per episode - US market recovers cost and can sell into Canada at 1/10th the cost - Thus, private commercial broadcasters can make no profit on domestic drama The Canadian Broadcasting System - - mixed: with public and private elements - Competitive - Highly regulated by the CRTC - ( Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission) - Which licenses and monitors - Classic case of social responsibility model The Canadian Broadcasting Act (1991) - The Canadian Broadcasting System will serve to safeguard enrich and strengthen the cultural, political social and economic fabric of Canada - Each element will contribute to the creation and presentation of Canadian programs - Each.. Will Make Maximum use and no less than predominant use of Canadian creative resources Do we Need the CBC? - You Decide Turn the tables and question private broadcasters - They are Strong in local news - But act only as Resellers of US programs - 5% of Global’s prime time audience is to Canadian shows (eg. BCTV) - CTV/Global Schedules are set in New York by US networks - Spend 400 m annually on US programming,$ Just 50 on Canadian drama - But eligible for over $500 million in subsidy and protections ( Nordicity, 2006) Review: The Economic Problem - Underdeveloped Ad Market - TV ad revenues are 66% the size of their US counterparts on a per capita basis - Why? Overspill of US ads - Underdevelopment of sectors of ads which are in the public realm in Canada (health, education etc) Economic Problem 2 - Global can go to Hollywood and buy rights to air Greys’ Anatomy in Canada, and pay 100 K or less per episode - But costs to produce a Anatomy here would be 2 million per episode ( 10 to 20 times more) - Why? Economies of scale in the US: US product recovers most of its costs in the home market, can afford to sell below cost in foreign countries - Cheaper to import license than make Identity • Characteristics by which a person or thing/group of persons or thing is known • Recognizable as the same or different • Multiple identities possible • Now, politically morphed into ‘identity politics’: the strategic assertion of a unity • Modern identities have channelled through nation Myths about Canadian Cultural Identity • Defined against the US/ British or French fragments • Seen as ‘hybridized’, ‘hyphenated’: French Canadian, English Canadian, Immigrant Canadian, Aboriginal Canadian • Seen as ‘regionalized’– Western, Eastern or central Canadian • Increasingly seen not as bicultural but more as multicultural Other Defining Markers • NOT American ( the ‘rant’) • NOT nationalistic ( no anthem in schools) • MORE deferential to authority (Garrison versus Frontier mentality) • MORE public enterprise culture (rail, universal health care, education, CBC) • GO BETWEEN: – international peace-keeper, trusted intermediary,--history of land mines treaty: self image of a kinder, gentler peoples • Not Mono cultural: bilingual and multicultural( mosaic versus melting pot) Gendering the Media Key Ideas • For most people, the identification of oneself as female or male is the foundation of self-identity – Men may ‘naturally’ be seen as more aggressive, domineering, competitive and hierarchically oriented – Females may ‘naturally’ be seen as more passive, acquiescent, nurturing , egalitarian and domestically oriented – These arguments are ‘essentialist’: that is, they assume a kind of biological determinism or universal pattern of culture – BUT: • Biology may determine our sex as male or female but culture shapes the content and conduct of what it takes to be a woman or a man (Fleras,2001:112) • Gender identity is socialized: it is a cultural construct that the media actively work to promote • Sex/gender distinction is a matter of social power • Therefore: media representation of gender important Theoretical Basis for Critique • Based on Cultivation Hypothesis – Repeated exposure to stereotypes of women may ‘condition’ a world view where • Women are subordinate • Women are defined by sexual display • Women are sexually available ( see Signorelli of the Annenberg school) – Reinforcing patriarchal social values ( hegemonic/dominant cultural power) Theory 2 • Effects studies – Tannis McBeth Williams • Experimental study Notel, Unitel, Multitel introduction of TV to a Northern Canadian Community – Found children’s play exhibited more sex-role stereotyped behaviors after introduction of TV – Perceptions more traditional • Judge stories on the basis of what they look like rather than what they do Theory 3 • Studies of Social Psychology – Emergence of self esteem – Body Image • Trend to thinner and thinner models • ( average more than 30% underweight) • More and more young women would like to look differently, are dieting for ideal shape • Rise of eating disorders, both genders • Fetishism of appearance: extreme makeover Theory 4 • Stereotype: a reduction of persons to a set of exaggerated, usually negative, character traits • How measured: – ‘content analysis’ – Textual analysis: roles • Madonna/whore dichotomy • Other common stereotypes ( Meehan) – Matriarch, goodwife, witch, bitch,decoy, victim, courtesan, siren or temptress. – Concern with images of women, tries to make assertions about the truth and falsity/fairness of representations or their social justice Politics of Representation: • – When minorities struggle for recognition/rights/sharing of power in political, cultural and media institutions ( another variation on identity politics) – Media and culture play an important role in drawing clear distinctions between who belongs and who doesn’t Presupposes a level of political organization: mobilization around a social problem – Discloses fundamental human need: drive for identity: to escape the “psychic prison” of a world view that excludes or denies( Fleras:307) • Presupposes media form an important function in: – Framing – Recognizing – Representing Cultural/ethnographic groups – Thus: media both reflect and shape social justice Proof of Problems • In media: – Analysis of ownership & control – Analysis of workers/work routines in news manufacture – Analysis media contents/reception ( latter scarce) • In society – Socio economic studies – Social dysfunctions ( conflict, threats to social cohesion) – Anti social behaviors: stereotyping/hate/social exclusiveness Allegations Against Media • Aboriginals, people of colour, immigrants and refugees tend to be underrepresented – – – – Invisible Irrelevant Victimized Trivialized • Or misrepresented – – – – – Race-Role Stereotyped ( Fleras:CC 423) Demonized Scapegoated Ridiculed Whitewashed/Tokenized • Or marginalized – Ethnic media enclaves – No public subsidy – Limited international imports Definition of Pornography • Porno: from the Greek root meaning prostitution or captive – I.e. subservient position • Graphos: writing about, depiction – I.e. separation, distance between subject and object • CC: 541. Definition of Erotica • From Greek Root: Eros • Passionate love • Pleasure, reciprocated The Cultural & Political Problem • There is a continuum of pornography • In any society, there is a continuum between freedom of expression and censorship • The goal must be to distinguish objectionable material from sexually explicit • Identify when it is legitimate to restrict the former and not the latter • Tests: – If mutual consent – If no harm – I.e. positive, life affirming sexual depiction, free Ideological Perspectives • • • Social Conservatives – See pornography as a threat to the social order and morality – A mockery of family values ( CC 547) – Often tied to patriarchy, right to life – “civil pollution” Feminists – See pornography as a threat to gender equality and morality – Tied to misogyny Libertarians – See right to pornography as individual choice – Government censorship as the biggest threat of all • Source: CC: 544. • R.A. Hackett and Yuezhi Zhao. 1998. Sustaining Democracy. Toronto: Garamond. 4. Alternative Media • Provide a range of perspectives and forms that are not readily available through profit driven media – May offer radical alternatives – Or may offer small for profit enterprises challenging the dominant market leaders – May offer individuals a new avenue for their expression ( DIY) – Or, may offer community groups/campus radio etc. new channels. – In some regimes ( eg. Quebec) there are grants to community associations or indie media to produce what they would like). Towards Addressing the Democratic Deficit • Enshrine a Right to Communicate in the Charter – Require universal access to media, media education and ensure diversity of public, private, commercial, non commercial, educative, entertaining, individual and group media • • • • Regulate Unfair Media Competition Provide public access media Reform the CBC/Public Broadcaster Widen and make more transparent the system of self regulation of the media: – Citizens must decide – Broadcasting systems are invented in the image of each generation – Need a cultural/communication environment movement The Essence of a Right to Communicate • Communication is basic to the life of all individuals and citizens • All people have the right to develop their own skills to tell their own stories and to learn how to express them • All people have a right to fair and equitable access to local and global resources they need to participate in everyday life • All have a right to participate in and make decisions about culture and communication – (CC: 580) What is to be Done • • • • • Strikes, complaints and rallies Media education in Schools Constitutional Challenges Boycotts New forms of policy intervention as global concentration and vertical integration of commercial media escalate • Opening up national models of regulation • Opening up citizen models of deliberation/ of fair, democratic communication Conclusion 130 • We are all propagandists to varying degrees, just as we are victims of propaganda, but the answer is not less propaganda, it is more, with the wisdom to judge what is counter propaganda, what is democratic propaganda, and what is propaganda that will liberate us all for peace and social justice Key Review Readings • 1, 2,4,5,7,10,11,16,18,19,22,25,27,29 • ( Number refers to Course Outline Key for Custom Courseware) STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK ONE • What is the main theme for CMNS 130? • Watch for 4 key definitions • What is the transmission model of communication? How does it differ from the cultural model? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK TWO • Why are Canadian media( esp. radio) central to the stories of Canadian nationbuilding? • What are narratives and why are they important in the study of communication history? • What is ‘modernity’ and how are communication media implicated in the emergence of ‘modernity’? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK THREE • Is the historical transition of the print commercial media from ruler, to political party to small then big business? • What is the libertarian theory of the press? • What would be its opposite? • Be sure you understand the concept of Ideology • Identify four areas where classical liberalism and reform liberalism differ STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK FOUR • What are some examples of propaganda at work from the Gulf War( 1991) and Iraq War ( 2002-)? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK FIVE • How does Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model Work? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK SIX • What are the special characteristics of the cultural/communication commodity and what are the business strategies for reducing risk? STUDY TIPS FOR WK 7 • What institutions try to balance the rights of the consumer with the rights of the advertiser? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK 8 • Name three stereotypes about Canadian identity • What role do the media play in promoting Canadian identity? • Can a nation survive without any indigenous media? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEK 9 – Are Canadian Media racist? Or can examples of media racism be observed? STUDY QUESTIONS FOR WEEKS 10 & 11 • What is the problem in media representations of women and men and how area these problems manifest? • What are the classical liberal arguments against censorship of pornography? STUDY QUESTIONS WEEK 12 • What are the classic reasons for Canadian state intervention in Broadcasting? • How do alternative media differ from public broadcasting?