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Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
LESSON
04
FROM
COMMUNICATION TO MASS COMMUNICATION
MODELS
Many
communication terms take
different meanings when they
refer to mass communication.
The term
mass
communication emerged in late
1930s.
Nature
of the communicator
Organized
and complex organization e.g. production
and distribution.
Extensive
division of labor and a lot
of professional communicators.
Nature
of audience
Mass
communication is directed toward a
relatively large, heterogeneous
and anonymous audience.
·
Large-
millions, too many people
for the communicator to interact
with personally
during
reasonable
period of time.
·
Heterogeneous-
audiences employ a variety of
positions within a
society.
·
Anonymous-
individuals in the audience are
personally unknown to the
communicator.
Nature
of communication experience
·
Public-
messages are not addressed
to no one in particular, content is open from
public.
·
Rapid-
reaches a large audience with
relatively short time or
space.
·
Transient-
messages made to be consumed
immediately- here today, gone
tomorrow. A most
frequently
cited definition of mass
communication is
"Mass
communications comprise the institutions and
techniques by which specialized groups
employ
technological
devices (press, radio, films
etc ) to disseminate symbolic content to
large , heterogeneous
and
widely dispersed audiences."(Janowitz
1968)
Then
mass communication is always
part of an organized group and
often a member of an
institution
which
has functions other than
communication
The
receiver is always an individual
but may often be seen by the
sending organization as a group or
collectively
with certain general
attributes.
Channel
Channel
includes large scale
technologically based distribution
devices and systems. The message
in
mass
communication is not a unique and
transitory phenomenon but a mass produced
and infinitely
repeatable
symbolic structure, often of great
complexity.
Of
particular significance in mass
communication are:-
1.
The public and open nature of
all communication.
2.
The limited and controlled
access to sending facilities.
3.
The impersonality of the relationship
between sender and receive.
4.
The imbalance of the relationship between
them.
5.
The intervention of institutionalized
arrangements between sender and
receiver.
The
process of mass
communication is not synonymous
with
the mass
media.
It
is the organized
technologies
which make mass communication
possible.
Development
in the history of mass
communication
DeFleur
and Ball Rokeach in 1989 point
out to a number o important developments in
the history of
mass
communication
1.
Age of signs and signals
2.
Age of speech and language
3.
Age of writing- papyrus
10
Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
4.
Age of printing after
15th century-Gutenberg's invention of
moveable type and printing
pres in
1456
5.
Age of Mass Communication was
ushered by widespread distribution of
newspapers (1920
radio;
1940 TV)
It
eroded the barrier of isolation among
people in the world and produce
significant changes in the
organization
and functioning of a society in
commerce politics education in
mere sociability
gossip.
Mass
media includes:
Print
media
1.
Books
2.
Newspapers
i)
In the beginning adversary of established
power.
ii)
Political press for
party advantage and political
propaganda.
ii)
Prestige press- high
bourgeois capitalist
class.
Electronic
media
1.
Film
2.
Broadcasting
3.
Recorded music VCR
New
media - Telematix
media
They
combine telecommunication and
information. It includes
·
Video
games
·
Virtual
reality
·
CD-
ROMs
They
represent a challenge.
Decentralization
supply and choice are not
longer predominantly in the hands of
supplier of
communication.
High
capacity- cable and satellite deliver
overcomes the former
restriction of cost distance and
capacity
Interactivity-
receiver can select answer
back, exchange and linked to
other receivers directly
Why
study mass
communication?
It
is the major source of acquiring
about the world knowledge -a
cognitive approach a mental
reality
about
the world based on our experience
with the media
This
metal attitude become the
basis for all sorts of
attitudes and behavior and has
numerous effects on
our
lives.
Media
is also a place where many affairs of
public life are played
out both nationally
and
internationally.
The conducts of democratic or undemocratic
politics significant social issues
are
addressed.
Media
is also a place where changing culture
and values of societies and groups are
constructed stored
and
most visibly expressed.
Primary key to fame and celebrity
status.
Media
has become the reality against
which the real world is compared.
The media view of the
world
has
become more real to many
people than the real world
itself.
Media
are the single largest focus of
leisure-time activity and
means of entertainment. They
help
organize
and interrelate the rest of
leisure. As a result a media has
become a major and
expanding
industry
providing employment and wide range of
political economic benefits.
That
is why mass media is of wide interest and
is subject to so much scrutiny and
regulation as well as
theorizing.
And we need to consider theories that
deal primarily with the ways
individual access and
process
media content and the ways with which
mass media sources influences
those individuals.
Some
sort of theory was needed to
guide this task of media
reform. The theory should
answer questions
such
as these:
1.
Should media do something more than
merely distribute whatever content
will earn them
the
greatest profits in the shortest
time?
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Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
2.
Are there some essential
public services that media
should provide even if no
immediate
profits
can be earned?
3.
Should media become involved in
identifying and solving
social problems?
4.
Is it necessary or advisable for media to
serve as watchdogs and protect consumers
against
business
fraud and corrupt
bureaucrats?
5.
What should we expect media to do for us
in times of crisis?
These
broad questions about the role of media
are linked to issues
concerning the day-to-day
operation
of
media.
1.
How should media management and
production jobs be structured?
2.
What moral and ethical
standards should guide media
professionals?
3.
Exactly what constitutes being a
"journalist"?
4.
Are there any circumstances
when it is appropriate or even necessary
to invade people's privacy
or
risk
running their
reputation?
5.
Should television networks
broadcast highly rated program even if it
routinely contains high levels
of
violence?
Answers
to questions like these are
found in NORMATIVE
THEROY- a
type of theory that
describes
an
ideal way for a media system
to be structured and
operated
Normative
theories are different from
most of the theories we will study.
They don't describe
things as
they
are nor do they
provide
scientific explanations or predictions.
Instead
they describe the way things
should be if some ideal values or
principles are to be
realized.
Normative
theories come from many
sources. Sometimes they are
developed by media practitioners
themselves.
Sometimes they are developed
by social critics or academics. Sometimes
it is the synthesis
of
ideas developed over the
past centuries.
A
SHORT EXERCISE
Take
a few minutes off, before we proceed, to
think about your views
concerning the role of media
for
yourself,
about your community and
your state, your nation and
your world.
·
What
are the most important
things that media should and
shouldn't do?
·
What
standards of behavior should media
practitioners follow as they
perform these tasks?
·
What
about the high percentage of
entertainment programming on
television?
·
Should
there be less entertainment and more
content that informs and
educate?
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