Monday 27 April 2015

Audience

Audience

Audiences are seen as active producers of meaning, rather than as merely consumers of media meanings. They make sense of media texts accord­ing to their social position (in terms of their identity) – and their gender, race, class etc.

·        Reception Theory - We use our own personal experiences and cultural knowledge to interpret a text in a personal way. Stuart Hall states The social situations of readers/viewers/listeners may lead them to adopt different stances. ‘Dominant’ readings are produced by those whose social situation favours the preferred reading; ‘oppositional’ readings are produced by those whose social position puts them into direct conflict with the preferred reading. Reception theory suggests that our reading of a text is MEDIATED by our own cultural experiences. Hall states that producers encode a message and audiences decode them.

·        Uses and Gratification – Suggests 4 uses and gratifications that audiences obtain from a text – Diversion, Surveillance, Personal Relationships, Personal Identity.

·        Roland Barthes – wrote a seminal essay entitled ‘The Death of the Author’ (1967) In it he states The essential meaning of a work depends on the impressions of the reader, rather than the “passions” or “tastes” of the writer; “a text’s unity lies not in its origins, but in its destination,” “To give a text an Author” (and assign a single, corresponding interpretation to it) “is to impose a limit on that text.” He states the author (or the producer’s intention) is not important, what is important is the way/ways in which audiences interpret the text. i.e. The audience is more important that the producer.