Representation
Representation
Understanding
representation is all about understanding the choices that are made when it
comes to portraying something or someone in a mass media text. It's impossible
to portray every aspect of an individual in a photograph, or even in a feature
film, so certain features of their personality and appearance get highlighted,
and are often enhanced, when it comes to constructing the representation that
the audience will see. When representing a person, media texts often focus on
their:
- Age
- Gender
- Race/Ethnicity
- Financial Status
- Job
- Culture/nationality
Signs and symbols are used
as a kind of visual shorthand to represent these attributes. When we decode
these signs we make assumptions about who the character is (usually by
comparing them to similar characters we have encountered before), and this
allows us to put them in a category and "read" them in context. For
instance, when constructing characters for a TV or movie scene the producers
might give an old man white hair and a walking stick, or provide a wealthy
lawyer with a three piece suit to wear and a briefcase to carry. Whilst not all
old men need a walking stick and not all lawyers carry briefcases, these are
easy and quick ways of signifying information about the character.
Who? What? Why? Where?
When you're analysing
representation, think about the following questions:
- Who or what is being represented? Who is the preferred audience for this representation?
- What are they doing? Is their activity presented as typical, or atypical? Are they conforming to genre expectations or other conventions?
- Why are they present? What purpose do they serve? What are they communicating by their presence? What's the preferred reading?
- Where are they? How are they framed? Are they represented as natural or artificial? What surrounds them? What is in the foreground and what is in the background?
Once you start to think
carefully about different representations, you will find that the same
representation means different things to different people. We all decode
representations according to our own life experience, where we've lived, how
old we are, and what other media texts we are familiar with, as well as a
myriad psychological factors. Other elements such as political sympathies and
social class can come into play. When producers construct a media
representation, they often assume that the audience is one homogenous mass that
will all decode the representation in the same way. However, people see even
the most basic images in different ways. Look at the two famous optical
illusions below. What do you see first?
Old or young
woman? Duck or rabbit? The problem with representing any kind of reality in a
media text is that it's never going to be 100% accurate. Representation always
involves the construction of a version of reality, not reality itself (even in
so-called Reality TV!) So media producers have to make choices; what to put in,
what to leave out. If something is always represented the same way (our lawyer
with a briefcase) we become comfortable with that representation, whether it
reflects what is true about 21st century lawyers (who are more likely to be
carrying a laptop bag) or not. Don't forget that every media representation
represents somebody's point of view.
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