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Flashcards in Chapter 1 - Mass Communication: A Critical Approach Deck (31)
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1
Q

Communication

A

The process of creating symbol systems that convey information and meaning (for example, language, Morse code, film, and computer codes).

2
Q

Culture

A

The symbols of expression that individuals, groups, and societies use to make sense of daily life and to articulate their values; a process that delivers the values of a society through products or other meaning-making forms.

3
Q

Mass Media

A

The cultural industries - the channels or communication - that produce and distribute songs, novels, news, movies, online computer services, and other cultural products to a large number of people.

4
Q

Mass Communication

A

the process of designing and delivering cultural messages and stories to diverse audiences through media channels as old as the book and as new as the internet.

5
Q

Digital Communication

A

images,texts, and sounds that use pulses of electric current or flashes of laser light and are converted (or encoded) into electric signals represented as varied combinations of binary numbers, ones and zeros; these signals are then reassembled (decoded) as a precise reproduction of a TV picture, a magazine article, or telephone voice.

6
Q

Senders

A

The authors, producers, agencies, and organizations that transmit messages to receivers.

7
Q

Messages

A

The texts, image, and sounds transmitted from senders to receivers.

8
Q

Mass Media Channel

A

Newspapers, books, magazines, radio, movies, television, or the Internet.

9
Q

Receivers

A

The targets of messages crafted by senders.

10
Q

Gatekeepers

A

Editors, producers, and other media managers who function as message filters, making decisions about what types of messages actually get produced for particular audiences.

11
Q

Feedback

A

Responses from receivers to the senders of messages.

12
Q

Selective Exposure

A

The phenomenon whereby audiences seek messages and meaning that correspond to their preexisting beliefs and values.

13
Q

Convergence

A

The first definition involves the technological merging of media content across various platforms; cross platform. The second definition describes a business model that consolidates various media holdings under one corporate umbrella.

14
Q

Cross Platform

A

A particular business model that involves a consolidation of various media holdings - such as cable connection, phone service, television transmission, and Internet access - under one corporate umbrella; convergence.

15
Q

Narrative

A

The structure underlying most media products, it includes two components: the story (what happens to whom) and the discourse (how the story is told).

16
Q

High Culture

A

A symbolic expression that has come to mean “good taste”; often supported by wealthy patrons and corporate donors, it is associated with fine art (such as ballet, the symphony, painting, and classical literature), which is available primarily at theaters or museums.

17
Q

Low Culture

A

A symbolic expression supposedly aligned with the questionable tastes of the “masses,” who enjoy the commercial “junk” circulated by the mass media, such as soap operas, rock music, talk radio, comic books, and monster truck pulls.

18
Q

Modern Period

A

The term describing the a historical era spanning the time from the rise of the Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries to the present; it’s social values include celebrating the individual, believing in rational order, working efficiently, and rejecting tradition.

19
Q

Progressive Era

A

A period of political and social reform that lasted from the 1890s to the 1920s.

20
Q

Post Modern Period

A

The term describing a contemporary historical era spanning the 1960s to the present; its social values include opposing hierarchy, diversifying and recycling culture, questioning scientific reasoning, and embracing paradox.

21
Q

Explain the interrelationship between culture, mass media, and mass communication.

A

Culture is the values held, mass communication is the message that is designed to share those values, and mass media is the means by which mass communication is shared.

22
Q

What are the key technological breakthroughs that accompanied the transition to the print and electric eras? Why were these changes significant?

A

Printing press, telegraph, film, television, computers, cable, DVDs, VCRs, satellite, cell phones, smart phones, PDAs, and email.

It changed our relationship with media and culture.

23
Q

Explain the linear model and it’s limitations.

A

Senders transmit messages through a mass media channel to large groups of receivers. In the process gatekeepers function as message filters. This process allows for feedback in which receivers can return messages to senders if the choose.

Limitations: messages usually do not move smoothly from point A to point Z. Senders have no control over how their messages will be interpreted.

24
Q

Describe the development of mass medium from emergence to convergence.

A
  1. Emergence Stage: inventors and technicians try to solve a particular problem.
  2. Entrepreneurial Stage: inventors and investors determine a practical and marketable use for a new device.
  3. Mass Medium Stage: businesses figure out how to market the new device or medium as a consumer product.
  4. Convergence Stage: older media is reconfigured in carious forms on newer media.
25
Q

In looking at the history of popular culture, explain why newer and emerging forms of media seem to threaten the status quo values.

A

When someone does something that isn’t seen as acceptable, the number of people that see that is extremely high. People become desensitized and all of a sudden values are changed.

26
Q

Describe the skyscraper model of culture. What are its limitations?

A

A view on culture as a hierarchy, with superior products at the top and inferior ones at the bottom.

Limitations:

  1. An inability to appreciate fine art
  2. A tendency to exploit high culture
  3. A throw-away ethic
  4. A diminished audience for high culture
  5. Dulling our cultural taste buds
27
Q

Describe the map model of culture.

A

Here culture is an ongoing and complicated process that allows us to better account for our diverse and individual tastes.

28
Q

What are the chief differences between modern and postmodern values?

A

Modernism is efficiency, individualism, rationalism, and progress. Postmodernism is populism, diversity, nostalgia, and paradox.

29
Q

What are the five steps in the critical process?

A
  1. Description
  2. Analysis
  3. Interpretation
  4. Evaluation
  5. Engagement
30
Q

Which of the five steps in the critical process is the most difficult? Why?

A

Interpretation. I’m not positive why but I would think it is because the number of possible interpretations are endless, and dependent on the knowledge of the person doing the interpreting.

31
Q

Why is the critical process important?

A

It allows us to participate in a debate about media culture as a force for both democracy and consumerism.