Wednesday, 28 September 2011

JOHN BERGER: WAYS OF SEEING

Venus (Roger Michell 2007)

Daniel Chandler in Notes on the Male Gaze writes:

    In Ways of Seeing, a highly influential book based on a BBC television series, John Berger observed that ‘according to usage and conventions which are at last being questioned but have by no means been overcome - men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at’ (Berger 1972, 45, 47). 
    Berger argues that in European art from the Renaissance onwards women were depicted as being ‘aware of being seen by a [male] spectator’, Berger adds that at least from the seventeenth century, paintings of female nudes reflected the woman’s submission to ‘the owner of both woman and painting’. He noted that ‘almost all post-Renaissance European sexual imagery is frontal - either literally or metaphorically - because the sexual protagonist is the spectator-owner looking at it’ . He advanced the idea that the realistic, ‘highly tactile’ depiction of things in oil paintings and later in colour photography (in particular where they were portrayed as ‘within touching distance’), represented a desire to possess the things (or the lifestyle) depicted . This also applied to women depicted in this way . 
    Writing in 1972, Berger insisted that women were still ‘depicted in a different way to men - because the "ideal" spectator is always assumed to be male and the image of the woman is designed to flatter him’. In 1996 Jib Fowles still felt able to insist that ‘in advertising males gaze, and females are gazed at’ (Fowles 1996, 204). And Paul Messaris notes that female models in ads addressed to women ‘treat the lens as a substitute for the eye of an imaginary male onlooker,’ adding that ‘it could be argued that when women look at these ads, they are actually seeing themselves as a man might see them’ (Messaris 1997, 41). 
    Such ads ‘appear to imply a male point of view, even though the intended viewer is often a woman. So the women who look at these ads are being invited to identify both with the person being viewed and with an implicit, opposite-sex viewer’ . We may note that within this dominant representational tradition the spectator is typically assumed not simply to be male but also to be heterosexual, over the age of puberty and often also white.

Friday, 23 September 2011

G322 TELEVISION DRAMA

In the first half of your AS examination, you will analyse representation in a five-minute unseen extract of  television drama. There will be one focus: age, gender, ethnicity, sexuality, class and status, physical ability/disability, regional identity. There will be one compulsory question, for example:


  1. Discuss the ways in which the extract constructs representations age of using the following:
·      Camera shots, angles, movement and composition
·      Editing
·      Sound
·      Mise-en-scene



      Today we tackle G322 June 2009 paper with the Dr Who extract for analysis. After doing the exam, we look at the examiner's report. The exam focus is on representation of gender.


Wednesday, 21 September 2011

G322: INSTITUTIONS AND AUDIENCES (FILM)


Heyday Films produced Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows (David Yates, 2011)
In Section B of your examination, you answer a long essay question on aspects of the film industry and processes of production, distribution, marketing and consumption. We focus on specific studios/production companies that target British audiences. We consider contemporary film distribution practices (digital cinema, DVD, HD-DVD, downloads etc) and how these affect production, marketing and distribution. We will study:

  • who makes, owns, funds and distributes specific recent films
  • cross media convergence and synergy in production, distribution & marketing
  • new film technologies such as digital cinema
  • technological convergence
  • proliferation in hardware and content for institutions & audiences
  • how national and British audiences are targeted by film institutions
  • how your own experience illustrates wider trends
We will look at case studies such as Working Title, DNA Films, Heyday, GK Films
DNA Films produced The History Boys, The Last King of Scotland, Notes on a Scandal (all 2006)

GK Films produced London Boulevard (William Monahan, 2010)

TED TALKS: AUGMENTED REALITY



Today we watch one of a selection of screenings from Ted Talks. 
Wireless data from every light bulb
What we learned from 5 million books
Magic and Lies on iPods 

First, a fascinating development in augmented reality, part of the revolution in the way that intuitive computer technology is changing our daily life. In this lecture, the architect of Bing maps at Microsoft demonstrates how maps can carry additional information.

Watch Blaise Aguera y Arcas on Ted Talks:  augmented reality maps



In the second example Tim Berners-Lee explains the vital importance of open source data. The example shown relates to an American lawyer correlating data about water supplies to housing with data about the ethnicity of householders: he succeeded in demonstrating that the water board had conspicuously failed  to connect black householders.

Watch Tim Berners-Lee on Ted Talks: Tim Berners Lee: The Year Open Data Went Worldwide

Monday, 19 September 2011

MAGAZINE DESIGN

PRINT BRIEF
The preliminary exercise: using DTP and an image manipulation program, produce the front page of a new school/college magazine, featuring a photograph of a student in medium close-up plus some appropriately laid-out text and a masthead. Additionally candidates must produce a DTP mock-up of the layout of the contents page to demonstrate their grasp of the program.
Main task: the front page, contents and double page spread of a new music magazine (if done as a group task, each member of the group to produce an individual edition of the magazine, following the same house style). Maximum four members to a group.
OCR exemplar music magazine brief
SCHOOL / COLLEGE MAGAZINE DESIGN
Search for 'college magazine design' images for ideas:




University of Chichester magazine




  • Start by taking photos around school for inset images
  • Take an original photograph that would make a striking magazine cover.
  • Turn it into the magazine cover design of your choice using PhotoShop.
  • Create an interactive poster using Glogster that explains your decisions.
Glog about the AS Media course as an example of how to create a Glog

ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS 
We have a tutorial on Adobe After Effects which we will use to make our film production company ident.
Venturay Productions 'Magic' Trailer

Friday, 16 September 2011

FRONT ROW: MARK LAWSON

Time to listen in to what BBC radio 4 has to offer. Media students should not neglect radio: it is easy to listen again using BBC iPlayer and there is a wealth of useful archive information in the form of interviews.

Mark Lawson talks to Michael Caine 
Last broadcast on Tue, 27 Oct 2009

Today we hear Michael Caine describing his early work in cinema, including his initial success in the States, where his accent and class didn't count against him.

We discuss the development of British cinema and television, and the films of the 1960s and 1970s, and discuss film in relation to social class and regionality.

We watch extracts from Educating Rita and analyse how the opening sequence establishes class through sound codes, mise-en-scene, accent and camera angles.

Watch 'Educating Rita'

MARK KERMODE FILM REVIEWS
Listen to Mark Kermode podcast on BBC Radio 5 LIve

 



Wednesday, 14 September 2011

IDEOLOGY

What is ideology? It is the ideas that lie behind a media text, the agenda that drives its producers.
Ideology is the body of ideas or set of beliefs that underpins an institution or way of behaving and creates social relations. Different sets of beliefs are held by different groups in society and the most prevalent beliefs are those held by the dominant (ruling) groups.

Look here for helpful explanations of terms such as dominant ideology (hegemony), preferred readings, oppositional reading:
Mediaknowall


Watch scenes from East Is East (Damien O"Donnell, 1999). How might different audiences respond, depending on their values?
East Is East trailer


In 1971 Salford fish-and-chip shop owner George Khan expects his family to follow his strict Pakistani Muslim ways. But his children, with an English mother and having been born and brought up in Britain, increasingly see themselves as British and start to reject their father's rules on dress, food, religion, and living in general.