definitions

  • Positive and negative stereotypes – traits and characteristics that relate to a typical type of person that are generally either negative or positive.
  • Counter-types – This is a representation that is the opposite of a stereotypical associations of groups, people or places.
  • Misrepresentation – giving a false or misleading account of the nature of something
  • Selective representation – the ways in which the media portrays particular groups, communities or topics from a particular ideological perspective.
  • Dominant ideology – the term dominant ideology denotes the attitudes, beliefs, values, and morals shared by the majority of the people in society.
  • Constructed reality – the argument that society is created by humans and human interaction, which they call habitualization.
  • Hegemony – leadership or dominance, especially by one social group over others.
  • Audience positioning – the techniques used by the creator of a text to try to get the audience to understand the ideology of the text
  • Fluidity of identity – an identity that is constantly changing or is constantly evolving
  • Constructed identity – where an identity has been structured by interactions with family or friends, organisations, institutions, media and other connections we make in our everyday life.
  • Negotiated identity – where people reach agreements on “who is who” in their relationships. 
  • Collective identity –  is the shared sense of belonging to a group.

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