Category Archives: Genre

Filters

Author:
Category:

THEORY REVISION

SEMIOTICS

ROLAND BARTHES – Concept 1: Denotation and Connotation

Barthes’ tells us by using a ‘denotative reading’ is how viewers decode media products. This occurs when a reader recognises the literal and physical content, e.g. an older man with his fist in the air, the style and colour of clothing. After this, readers quickly move beyond the recognition of the product and engage with what he calls ‘cognitive decoding.’ This refers to the deeper understanding prompted by advertisers to the emotional, symbolic/ideological significances, e.g. the older man’s fist may suggest defiance or aggression, the clothes may suggest a class.

WHEN LOOKING AT A MEDIA TEXT:

Image Features:Look out for:
POSE
(Subject positioning, stance or body language)
Breaking the 4th wall creates: confrontational/aggressive or invitational feel.
Off screen gaze: Right side – adventure/optimism. Left side – regret/nostalgia.
Body language: strong/weak/passive/active/open/closed
Subject Positioning: Where the person/people stand.
Proxemics: Their distance from people/things.
MISE-EN-SCENE
(Props, costume and setting)
Symbolic Props: rarely accidental
Pathetic fallacy: weather connotations to add meaning – character’s thoughts/tone
Costume Symbolism: Stereotypes help to decipher a character’s narrative function
LIGHTING CONNOTATIONSHigh-Key lighting: no shadows – positive and upbeat with a lighter feel
Low-Key lighting: Serious/ sad/moody connotations.
Chiaroscuro lighting: contrast lighting (light sharply cuts through darkness) – hopelessness/mystery
Ambient: infers realism
COMPOSITIONAL EFFECTS
(Shot distance, positioning of subjects in the frame)
Long shots: dominated their environment
Close-ups: intensifies emotions/impending drama
Open/closed frames: open- freedom, closed – entrapment
POSTPRODUCTION EFFECTSColour control: Red- anger, white – innocence
High saturation: Vibrant colours – cheerful
Desaturation: Dull colours – serious/sombre

Barthes’ recognised that text also gave meaning. He says it helps to ‘anchor’ image meanings in advertisements. Without anchorage, media imagery is likely to produce polysemic connotations (multiple meanings).

“a vice which holds the connotated meanings from proliferating”

Concept 2: The media’s ideological effect

Barthes’ suggests media replaces/replicates functions of myth making. The press, television, advertising, radio – convey the same sort of authority as myths and induce similar ideological effects. Anonymisation of myths shows it’s a collective view rather than singular –> media replicates this.

Naturalisation: Media products present ideas as natural/fact/common sense. When a range of media texts repeat the same idea, audience believe it is a fact rather than perspective, social norm.

Media myths are reductive: Media simplifies and reduces/purifies ideas to make it more digestible. – message reduction discourages audiences to question and analyse thoroughly.

Media myths reinforce existing social power structures: “the oppressor has everything, his language is rich, multiform, supple.” Those who have power tend to control the myth making process through the privileged access – maintain illusion that the system that benefits the powerful is naturally ordered and unchangeable.

C.S PEIRCE:

Peirce did not believe that signification was a straightforward binary relationship between a sign and an object, he viewed this innovative part of his triad as how we perceive or understand a sign and its relationship to the object it is referring to. The representamen in Peirce’s theory is the form the sign takes, which is not necessarily a material or concrete object. Peirce theorised that we interpret symbols according to a rule, a habitual connection. ‘The symbol is connected with its object because the symbol-user and a sign exists mainly due to the fact that it is used and understood. Peirce’s triad of signs concludes of:

Icon – A sign that looks like an object/person, e.g picture of a lamp.

Index – A sign that has a link to its object, e.g smoke and fire.

Symbol – A sign that has a more random link to its object, e.g colour, shape

FERDINAND DE SAUSSURE:

According to Saussure theory of signs, signifier and signified make up of signs. A sign is composed of both a material form and a mental concept. The signifier is the material form, i.e., something that can be heard, seen, smelled, touched or tasted, whereas the signified is the mental concept associated with it. C.S Peirce based his research off of Saussure.

Signifier – Stands in for something else.

Signified -Idea being evoked by signifier.

Television – Revision

Difference between culture industries and other industries:

  • Media industries don’t have a set structure and can be creative free. In other words, there isn’t a set of rules that specifically apply to culture industries. Free roam of creativity. Other industries have a set of rules they follow, for example in a bakery, you are told what to make and how to make it, but culture industries act as a dog being let of a leash.
  • Culture industries supply people with information they may need. For example, the weather channel tells people what the weather is and they determine what people where/take to work (umbrella if its raining). Whereas, other industries
  • One (other industries) necessity and another (Culture industries) is for entertainment.
  • A bakery is predictability as they repeat what they make however culture industries are vertile.
  • Information (Culture industries) plays a pivot role in the way it organises peoples sense of the world. – Golding and Murdock

Similarity’s between culture industries and other industries:

  • Both industries produce their products for money for the business.
  • Both are jobs for people for income.

Media Ownership:

  • Capitalist Media
  • Public Service Media
  • Civil Society Media

Public Service Broadcasting:

  • What is public service broadcasting? – Public service broadcasting is a public television service presented to citizens, that is funded by a TV licence fees from the government. It is also diverse as it has to cater for multiple ages groups and likings. It has to live up to “Inform, educate and entertain” and live up to quality standards. Often state run, and state funded.
  • What is unique about BBC and C4?
  • What is good about the BBC – No ads. Diverse (Choose what channel you wants). Is free to watch in parts. Familiar to British people and is part as the British’s peoples identity’s as well it is a long and proud tradition within the UK. Not all controlled by the government and is critical of the government.
  • What is the criticism of the BBC? – Pay for TV license and people don’t want to pay for it. May not be 100% accurate.
  • CSP – James Curran and Jean Seaton.

Essay – Industries, PSB/ Curran and Seaton, CSP (Channel 4 – No Offence)/ Hesmondhalgh/ Audience (pg 1-4, not in book)

television csp: No Offence and The Killing

No Offence

No Offence - Rotten Tomatoes
About:
No Offence scored 8 out of 10 on IMDb.
83% liked this TV show

“A group of police officers try their best to keep the streets of Manchester free of crime. When all else fails, they decide to use unconventional methods to teach the perpetrators a lesson.”

  • First episode date: May 5, 2015
  • No. of series: 3
  • Production company: AbbottVision
  • AbbottVision is a British independent television production company, established in 2008 by the writer, creator and producer Paul Abbott. Founded: 2008
  • Abbott Vision Profiles in Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube
  • Original network: Channel 4
  • Genre: Police procedural; Drama; Black comedy
  • Black comedy, also known dark humor, is a style of comedy that makes light of subject matter that is generally considered taboo, particularly subjects that are normally considered serious or painful to discuss
  • Executive producers: Paul Abbott; Martin Carr; Paul Coe

Series 1, Episode 1

The first series focuses on the team’s investigation into the serial murders of young girls with Down syndrome. It was renewed for two further runs

In the UK, the first episode of No Offence launched with 2.5 million viewers, Channel 4’s biggest midweek drama launch for more than three years. Although subsequent episodes lost overnight viewers, dropping as low as 1.2 million, the weekly consolidated series average remained at 2.5 million and finished 47% up on Channel 4’s slot average

  • In France, the first episode of No Offence aired on 29 February 2016 on France 2 and was watched by 5.46 million viewers, 20.4% of the TV audience
  • France 2: is a French public national television channel. It is part of the state-owned France Télévisions group, along with France 3, France 4, and France 5.

telivision

Capital

  •  drama adaptation of Peter Bowker’s best-selling novel of the same name
  • story follows the impact of gentrification in a city (specifically a fictional “Pepys Road”)
  • original network – BBC ONE

Deutschland 83

  •  2015 German television series
  • It is a co-production of AMC Networks Sundance TV and RTL Television
  • production company, UFA Fiction, 
  • international distribution by RTL Group’s Fremantle Media International and North American distribution by Kino Lorber
  • “Martin is forced to become a spy and infiltrate the West Germany army. However, his actions land him in trouble and threaten to blow his cover”
  • Directed by

Edward Berger Samira Rads

Television

 Capital (Series 1, episode 1) and Deutschland 83 (Series 1, episode 1)

Needs reference to all four elements of the
Theoretical Framework (Language, Representation, Industries, Audience)

Media Languagecodes and conventions of the
crime drama are intertwined with aspects of social realism. Analysis should
include:
• Mise-en-scene analysis
• Semiotics: how images signify cultural meanings
Narrativenarrative techniques used to engage the audience

Capital and Deutschland

Deutschland 83

Production company: UFA Fiction

Genre: Cold War espionage

1 season 8 episodes

Was most popular foreign-drama in Britain upon release.

Deutschland 83 is a 2015 German television series starring Jonas Nay as a 24-year-old native of East Germany who, in 1983, is sent to West Germany as an undercover spy for the HVA, the foreign intelligence agency of the Stasi.

Narrative
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the spy thriller and crime drama – use of
enigmas, binary oppositions, restricted and omniscient narration etc. – position the audience?
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 has been controversial – particularly in Germany -through its
use of binary oppositions to contrast East and West Germany.
• The role of the hero and effect of audience alignment with Martin Rauch, a Stasi Officer.
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 can be defined as postmodern in its self-reflexive style.
• Narratology including Todorov.

Capital

Production Company: Kudos

Genre: British drama television

1 Season 4 Episodes

Capital is a three-part British television adaptation of John Lanchester’s novel Capital. The series was written by Peter Bowker, directed by Euros Lyn and produced by Matt Strevens for Kudos Film & Television Company. The story centres on the residents of a road in South London as the value of each house in the street is approaching £2 million. They all begin to receive repeated postcards with the message “We want what you have”. The first episode was broadcast on BBC One on 24 November 2015.

Narrative
• Which narrative techniques are used to engage the audience in the opening episode of Capital?
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the crime drama – use of enigmas,
restricted narration etc. – position the audience?
• Capital is characteristic of contemporary TV narrative style in its use of multiple story structure.
• The ways in which the narrative structure of Capital offers gratification to the audience.
• Narratology including Todorov.

Pages 6-9 in the CSP booklet 

Capital and Deutschland 83

Capital is a complex mainstream television product in which the codes and conventions of the crime drama are intertwined with aspects of social realism. Provides a wide range of representational areas to explore; the family, place, nation, class,
ethnicity, race and issues. Summary: When the residents of an affluent London street receive a strange note they dismiss it as a marketing campaign, until things begin to escalate. When the residents of an affluent London street receive a strange note they dismiss it as a marketing campaign, until things begin to escalate.

Deutschland is visually interesting, constructing a stylised representation of ‘real’ places which transmit meanings about characters, places and issues. A detailed analysis of different aspects of mise-en-scene will provide students with a strong foundation to build on in terms of analysing representations, ideological meanings and audience positioning. Summary: The drama follows Martin Rauch (Jonas Nay) as the 24 year-old East Germany native is pulled from the world as he knows it and sent to the West as an undercover spy for the Stasi foreign service. Hiding in plain sight in the West German army, he must gather the secrets of NATO military strategy.

It is a co-production of AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and RTL Television, positioning it to exploit the national and global market.
• Bought by C4 in Britain as part of their ‘Walter presents…’
• Cultural industries including Hesmondhalgh

capital and deutschland 83

DEUTSHCLAND 83

Media Language
The series is visually interesting, constructing a stylised representation of ‘real’ places which
transmit meanings about characters, places and issues. A detailed analysis of different aspects of
mise-en-scene will provide students with a strong foundation to build on in terms of analysing
representations, ideological meanings and audience positioning. Analysis should include:
• Mise-en-scene analysis
• Semiotics: how images signify cultural meanings
• Postmodernism: Use of pastiche and bricolage

Narrative
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the spy thriller and crime drama – use of
enigmas, binary oppositions, restricted and omniscient narration etc. – position the audience?
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 has been controversial – particularly in Germany -through its
use of binary oppositions to contrast East and West Germany.
• The role of the hero and effect of audience alignment with Martin Rauch, a Stasi Officer.
• The narrative of Deutschland 83 can be defined as postmodern in its self-reflexive style.
• Narratology including Todorov.

Genre:
• Conventions of the TV series and the way in which this form is used to appeal to audiences
• Definition of the series as belonging to the spy thriller genre
• Conventions of the period drama and reasons for its popularity
• Analysing the use of specific genres to discuss wider issues in society
• Genre theory including Neale

Media Representations
Deutschland 83 provides a range of representational areas to explore from the national and
regional to political structures and gender roles. All of the areas tend to overlap with
representations of a nation’s historical past allowing students to consider how representations
reflect social, cultural and historical circumstances:
• Representation of national and regional identity (East and West Germany (Europe))
• Representation of gender: male hero and spy, the female ‘love interest’ etc., the way
characters signify wider issues in society.
• Analysis of how the representations convey values, attitudes and beliefs about the world – both
contemporary and past.
• Theories of representation including Hall

Feminist theories including bell hooks and Van Zoonen (role of women)

CAPITAL

Media Language
Capital is a complex mainstream television product in which the codes and conventions of the
crime drama are intertwined with aspects of social realism. Detailed analysis of this media form
including the process through which media language develops as genre will provide students
with an opportunity to understand and reflect on the dynamic nature of genre. Analysis should
include:
• Mise-en-scene analysis
• Semiotics: how images signify cultural meanings
Narrative
• Which narrative techniques are used to engage the audience in the opening episode of
Capital?
• How does the use of the narrative conventions of the crime drama – use of enigmas,
restricted narration etc. – position the audience?
• Capital is characteristic of contemporary TV narrative style in its use of multiple story structure.
• The ways in which the narrative structure of Capital offers gratification to the audience.
• Narratology including Todorov.
Genre
• Conventions of the TV mini-series and the way in which this form is used to appeal to
audiences; how it is distinct from, but related to series and serials.
• Definition of the series as a hybrid genre, belonging to the drama, social realism and crime
genres
• Genre theory including Neale.
Media Representations
Capital provides a wide range of representational areas to explore; the family, place, nation, class,
ethnicity, race and issues.
• Negative and positive use – or subversion – of stereotypes.
• Representations of family and their ideological significance – Capital constructs its
representation of nation in part through contrasting images of the family.
• Representation of place – London and by implication, the nation.
• Analysis of how the representations convey values, attitudes and beliefs about the world.
• Theories of representation including Hall.

When the residents of an affluent London street receive a strange note they dismiss it as a marketing campaign, until things begin to escalate. When the residents of an affluent London street receive a strange note they dismiss it as a marketing campaign, until things begin to escalate.

Television CSPs

Capital

`Capital’ is a drama adaptation of Peter Bowker’s best-selling novel of the same name. The story follows the impact of gentrification in a city, particularly focusing on a fictional Pepys Road, in South London. It was released in December 2015 and directed by Euros Lyn. Matt Strevens produced it and it originated in the United Kingdom.

Deutschland 83

Deutschland 83 is a 2015 German television series starring Jonas Nay as a 24-year-old native of East Germany who, in 1983, is sent to West Germany as an undercover spy for the HVA, the foreign intelligence agency of the Stasi. It premiered on the 17th of June 2015 and was directed by Edward Berger and Samira Radsi. It originated in the United States, and also partly in Germany.

Television CSP

‘No Offense’ and ‘ The Killing’ revision cards

No offence:

Origin Country: Great britain

Type: Police Procedural

Author: Pual Abbott

The series managed 2.5 million viewers on its first episode, which is Channel 4’s biggest breakthrough since 3 years beforehand. However the show quickly lost popularity overnight, with episodes after only having 1.2 million watchers. Afterwards it was released in France on the france 2 channel where it had 5.46 million viewers.

The series was based off of the crime investigation, station and workers of the greater Manchester police and was recorded in Manchester from 5 may 2015 to the 18th of October 2018 until it was discontinued on the 28th November 2019 and confirmed by Martin Carr on twitter.

The plot revolves around the investigation of 3 cases, a drowning, a murder and a disappearance. Which all turn out to be linked, someone is specifically targeting girls with down syndrome.

The Killing: