language

Cards (56)

  • What does Media Language look at?
    The means by which the media communicates with its audience. Codes, conventions, and technical elements (camera work, sound, editing, mise-en-scène).
  • Codes
    Systems of signs, which create meaning. Can be divided into symbolic codes and technical codes.
  • Technical Codes
    The way in which software and hardware are used to produce meaning; this includes mise-en-scene, sound, camera and editing
  • Symbolic Codes
    Symbolic codes show what is beneath the surface of what we see; they are the codes used to create deeper meaning
  • Verbal Codes
    Written or spoken codes; codes that use words
  • Non-Verbal Codes
    Codes that do not use words i.e. images/sounds/facial expressions etc.
  • Conventions
    The common features of a form or genre; the expected elements of a product
  • Semiotics
    The study of signs and symbols.
  • Anchorage
    Media language that's used to reinforce the meaning of another set of codes i.e. a caption reinforcing what is in an image
  • Call to Action
    When an audience is directed to do something by the media text
  • Sassure theory - Semiotics
    Signs are split into the sign, the signified and signifier

    Sign - The understanding the audience has
    Signifier - The language used to express the concept
    Signified - The concept that is represented by the sign
  • Sign
    The understanding the audience has
  • Signifier
    The language used to express the concept
  • Signified
    The concept that is represented by the sign
  • Paradigm
    A signifier and its links to other signifiers outside the same system of signs
  • Syntagm
    A signifier and its links to other signifiers within the same system of signs
  • Barthes Semiotics Theory
    There are two levels of signs in media; the first level: denotation and the second: denotation
  • Denotation
    What is actually present in the media text
  • Connotation
    What the symbol suggests
  • Myth
    The prominent ideologies that are encoded into a text's signs; the text is produced within to understand and also the way the current social constructs impact the text.
  • Peirce Theory - Semiotics
    Signs can be split into those that are icons, indexes or symbols
  • Icon
    A sign that physically resembles that which it signifies
  • Index
    A sign that has a direct link to that which it signifies but does not physically represent it
  • Symbol
    A sign that has a learned link to that which it signifies; the link is arbitrary and not actually linked to the signified in any way
  • Structuralism
    The belief that a single meaning is encoded into the text and that the audience must deconstruct that singular meaning
  • Deconstruction
    An approach to understanding the relationship between text and meaning; the attempt to decode the media into its intended or alternative readings
  • Post-Structuralism
    Challenges many of the assumptions of structuralism, most importantly the idea that a text has one single, identifiable meaning.
  • Binary oppositions
    The concept that there are two opposite concepts that drive the narrative forward such as good vs. evil, old vs. young, married vs. single etc.
  • Cinematography
    Use of camera to construct meaning
  • Cultural codes
    ways that audiences interpret meaning based on widely held assumptions and broadly known experiences
  • Mytheme
    a fundamental generic unit of narrative structure
  • Editing
    The way a scene has been pieced together from various elements; this may be editing of text and image or cutting between moving image videos
  • Mise-en-scene
    Everything in the frame; all visual elements within the camera lens including lighting, props, costume and setting
  • Sound
    Audio elements of a media product
  • Narration
    the action or process of narrating a story.
  • Diegesis
    the story that we specifically see and not the extra parts that are alluded to or suggested by the text
  • Quest narrative
    a character must go on a quest to overcome an obstacle and reach their goal.
  • Catharsis
    a release of pent of tension, often caused by the solution to an enigma or plot point
  • Character types' - Propp's Theory
    Hero - The Protagonist of the narrative who must go on a quest to overcome an obstacle and receive the princess as a reward

    Villain - The obstacle that blocks the hero

    Princess - The reward for the hero overcoming the obstacle; it is what the hero is questing for and often the driving force of the narrative

    Helper - Someone (or something) that directly aids the hero in their quest; usually follows them on the quest

    Donor - Someone that gives the hero something to help on their quest

    Dispatcher - The individual who sets the hero on the quest and gives him the instructions to complete it

    False Hero - A character who appears at the start to be a hero and attempting to also overcome the villain, but is revealed later to be another form of obstacle or fraud
  • Causality
    the relationship between cause and effect; how one part of the narrative drives the next incident