I see nothing wrong with a few minor touch ups on a photo: red eye, a face blemish here, maybe even adjusting eye color, however this appears to be one of those scenarios where you give an inch and they'll take a few miles. If that's going to be the case, I can't help but feel photos should not be airbrushed.
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Ad airbrushing
After reading the article on the Ralph Lauren advertisement I feel I must agree to some extent that some advertisements are pushing things too far. It's true that women today feel a lot of pressure to live up to the women presented by media. Airbrushed images they make models appear to have perfect figures only create an unnatural belief that women feel they must live up to in order to be considered beautiful by society. This in turn affects not only a woman's self esteem, but can have physical affects as well such as unhealthy crash diets.
Chapter 8
Chapter 8 discussed many different issues associated with identity. People need to know who they are and feel that they belong in the world. In this way an audience is created as a market. A market identifies a subset of the population as potential consumers of a particular indentifiable product or set of products.
There are two basic ways audiences are constructed and function as a market: as consumers (also referred to as market type) and as commodities. In turn at least a part of a person's identity is defined by their participation in a market. The consumer society suggests that all social problems can be solved by working on your "self".
The three most common and persistent ways of describing market types include:
1. Demographics-quantitative description of population according to a set of social or sociological variables such as age, income, and gender.
2. Taste Culture- Refers to continuing commitment of a group of people to some type of product.
3. Lifestyle Clusters- Represents the segment of population that tends to purchase and use certain kinds of products or to make certain kinds of decisions. (Members tend to spend their money and time in a similar manner)
When the audience is viewed as a commodity, they are looked at as an object produced in order to be sold for a profit. (TV and radio are the most common and obvious places that an audience is commodified).
Chapter 8 also discussed social identity and acknowledged three main questions:
1. Where do categories of identity come from and what do they signify?
2. What does it mean to belong to or be a member of a particular social group?
3. What is the content or meaning of categories and how are these meanings determined?
In response to these questions, there are two schools of thought.
1. Essentialist View- categories of identity are natural, necessary, and universal.
2. Anti-Essential View- There is no single physical trait or genetic marker that can be used to separate the human population into races.
As a whole, the chapter was trying to explain that people's identities are less stable and unified than they were in previous generations. People's identities are changing under the influence of pop culture and mass media.
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Chapter 5 meaning
Chapter 5 discussed the different ways in which we interpret media. First of all, it's important to remember that we are always interpreting media, though we aren't always aware we are doing so.
Chapter 5 broke up meaning into two separate domains.
1. The world itself
2. The languages people use to describe it.
In this way meaning organizes the human world, and human beings live in a world of meanings. This concept is associated with 'polysemy', the fact that anything can have a variety of different meanings or interpretations.
There are also two theories associated with meanings:
1. Representational (object in the world)
2. Conceptual (in someone's mind)
Chapter 5 also went into great detail about codes, or the systematic organization or structure of signs. Codes of meaning in this way, ultimately produce the world we live in.
In summation, chapter 5 explained that people live in a world of meanings and interpretations organized by codes of differences.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Ideology
Ideology is a very strange concept to me. Our own reality is based on the perceptions presented to us by those in society who have widespread political or economic power. I guess I never really thought about how vulnerable and impressionable people were until I started looking more deeply at the subject of ideology. We are told what to think, what questions to ask (what questions not to ask), what's socially acceptable or cool; all based on some elite power's own beliefs and interests. Even knowing this however, to act out on my own personal beliefs would be risking my acceptance and feeling of belonging in the world...this is a risk I am not yet ready to take. Perhaps someday I will become more brave...but until then I guess the saying "ignorance is bliss" will just have to be true.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Transmission Model Vs. The Cultural Model
The Transmission Model revolves around the idea of transportation in which a message or meaning is transported from one place or person to another. The biggest challenge of the process communication is to successfully transmit the exact thought and meaning in the mind of the sender to the mind of the receiver. This process of shared meaning is called intersubjectivity.In a nut shell the Transmission Model works as follows:
who/says what/to whom/ through what channel/ and with what effect.
The Cultural Model deals with the connection between processes of social communication and the production of common culture. This model also sees communication as the construction of a shared space or map of meaning within which people coexist. This system of shared meaning represent the world for us and gives us a common picture of reality. This process is known as ideology.
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