Ideology in Media Studies
Ideology is a difficult – but important – concept to grasp. Simply put, it is the ideas behind a media text, the secret (or sometimes not-so secret) agenda of its producers. It is important to be able to identify the different ideological discourses that may be present in even an apparently simple photograph.
In sociological terms, ideology is a body of ideas or set of beliefs that underpins a process or institution and leads to social relations. These sets of beliefs are those held by groups within society, and the prevalent ones are those held by the ruling/dominant groups.
Dominant ideology or hegemony
In any society the accepted and agreed beliefs are those of the ruling class, i.e. the class which is the ruling material (with all the money) force is at the same time its ruling intellectual (with all the ideas) force. Christianity is the main historical example (think of how many legal systems take Christian moral values as their basis)- are there any modern day equivalents? Football currently has hegemonic status in the UK – glance through the sports pages and see what coverage other sports get – and everyone is expected to understand and accept its national importance.
Hegemony is not a forced political movement, however. To use the previous example, no one is forced to watch/listen to/read about football. It’s just sometimes it seems that there are few alternatives. This is how hegemonies take hold: a majority decide to ‘fit in’ with the cultural values and ideas of their time and place and the minority keep their objections quiet. Hegemony is about consent, and one of the things it consents to is inequality – us and them.
What part does the media have to play in developing and maintaining a hegemony?
– Institutions, language, news/information, arbiting taste, regulating output, representations, ownership, authorship
What part does the media have to play in opposing/altering the hegemony?
-Challenging all of the above by presenting the alternatives in a positive light
Ideological Discourse
These are the issues/attitudes debated over in the Media which form part of the everyday ideological discourse in our society. The views taken on these subjects form the basis of our social rules and practice:
- education
- employment
- gender
- sexuality
- racism
- feminism
- nationalism/national identity
- youth/age
- left wing/right wing politics
- environmentalism
- public/personal reality
- crime and punishment etc
To test your understanding of the above, read a newspaper article and :
-make a note of any language which assumes the reader holds the same attitudes/values as the writer
-list the ideological discourses which are referred to either directly or indirectly
assess what part this particular article plays in maintaining or otherwise hegemonic belief. -How does what is said correspond to what the reader wants to read?
Preferred reading
Producers of a media text design it with a certain meaning in mind. They hope that audiences will decode their text in a certain way – particularly if the text is an advertisement. Preferred readings are those which tie in with hegemonic beliefs.
Oppositional Reading
Texts being texts, however, audiences can choose to read them any way they please. Often, if a text is approached by an audience that it was not originally targeted at (teenage boys reading teenage girls’ magazines, for example) they will decode it in an entirely different way to the original intentions of the producers, perhaps deriving humour from something that was meant to be serious (check out women’s magazines from the 1950s if you want a laugh in this post-feminist world). The audience may have a very different cultural or social experience from the producer, and may connect signifiers to completely different signifieds. Media texts may be less open than other texts (there is the danger that if you do not read, for example, a Marlboro print ad in a certain way it will make no sense at all) there is still room for oppositional reading.
Alternatives to the Hegemony
Some sections of the media present us with texts that offer alternative readings of society and are often known as ‘Fringe media’. Media may be defined as ‘alternative’ through
different material (ie not included in mainstream productions)
- unusual narrative form
- using mainstream forms to challenge mainstream ideology
- encoding alternative or oppositional messages in texts
- production practices reflecting economic constraints faced by small companies
- circulation through different distribution systems and specialist outlets
- finely targeted, small audience
- lack of popular appeal
- lack of commercial success
- represent which challenge stereotypes or include groups absent from other texts
http://www.mediaknowall.com/as_alevel/alevkeyconcepts/alevelkeycon.php?pageID=ideology