Friday, 17 October 2014

The Role Of Selection

The Role of Selection, Construction and Anchorage in Creating Representations.

Representation- The role of selection, construction and anchorage in creating representations.
You will provide anchorage for given newspaper images within different texts.

Key words: Formal, direct, colloquial, hyperbole, imperative.
You will need to be familiar with the following media studies terms:

Selection: 
The idea that producers and audiences are both selective, eg: editors select the news from that day's events and audiences select what to watch and remember.

Construction: 
The idea that a media text is not a window on the world but is  a product of individuals in organisations making decisions over the selection of content. In other words; we see what they want us to see.

Anchorage: 
A way of ‘tying down meaning’, without anchorage meaning could be polysemic – open to various interpretations, eg a caption anchors meaning to a photo, music anchors mood in a media text.



The Construction and Mediation of Representations
A news photograph for example may appear to be presenting us with a factual image but before it goes to print it has been through a process of construction:
• The photographer has selected his/her position, lens, angle, exposure and framing before taking the picture.
• The picture editor will decide if the image needs to be cropped, enhanced or in any way altered before inclusion into the paper.
• An editor will choose which, of the many available photographs of the image, will be the one chosen for inclusion in the newspaper and, importantly at this stage, the images which do not meet the needs of the text will be rejected.

Even then, further mediation takes place:

  • Will the photograph be large or small?  
  • Will the photograph be on the front page or, less visible, on page 8?
Placement choices like this, along with cropping and framing, act to focus the attention of the reader in a certain way.
• What headline and text will be used to accompany the photograph?
• Will the photograph have a caption?
• Will it be positioned close to another photograph?

Anchorage is basically used in media to attach meaning to something through either the matching of words to images or the juxtaposition of two images which construct a meaning.
For example in advertising, an image alone is polysemic open to a range of interpretations. To clarify what the image means and so to make the image relevant to the purpose of the advert, text can be added. Thus the image serves as the 'hook' while the text anchors meaning. This can be said also for photographs attached to newspaper articles. The same photograph takes on different connotations with different accompanying texts.

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