Sociology of Media (2) Approaches to Media Analysis I: Political Economy (31.10.2007)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 11 Marxism: Production and exchange
Advertisements

1 Technology, Industry, Work Is capitalism changing to a new economy? Is it useful to interpret recent political economic changes as a shift towards post-
Theoretical perspectives and the influence of news values.
Module 4 Social Determinants of Financial Reporting
Three Theories of How Social Reproduction Happens.
Media Criticism. The Economic Model In the United States, media institutions and the products they create can be analyzed from the perspective of Capitalism.
LIBERALISM AND SOCIALISM Ideologies of the state.
M. Jamshed Khan, Dept. of Economics, Edwardes College Peshawar 1 MIXED ECONOMY Mixed economy is that type of economic system in which government exercises.
The U. S. Economy: Private and Public Sectors
POLS 374 Foundations of Global Politics People and Economy Lecture October 6, 2005 People and Economy Lecture October 6, 2005.
Knowledge and Experience
Chapter 19, Economic Institutions
Marxist Feminism and the Family By Leanne, Catherine, Claire and Ruosi.
1 Economic System Dr. Kazi Shahdat Kabir
Economics of the Industrial Revolution How to make a living in the 1800s.
Dependency Theory. Towards a Critique of Developmentalist: Dependency Theory 1960s-- United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America. Main Authors:
Marxism and Functionalism on Education Access Sociology.
Liberal Pluralism Media Theory. Liberal Pluarlism The dominant perspective associated with contemporary capitalism. The dominant perspective associated.
Dependency critique Chilcote, Smith, Evans. Back to Weber & Marx Marx: state monolithic Weber: plurality & legitimate state coercion Marx theory dynamic.
Lecture 10 Work in the Post-Industrial Economy. Social Organization of Work As our society becomes more interdependent, the ways in which we organize.
April 11 th Pass in HMWK #4 Finish Lecture 10 Start lecture 11: Work in the Post-Industrial Society Homework:  Nothing! Work on Rough Draft of CCA Papers.
The Media Landscape… Not just what we watch, listen, play information society: the exchange of information is the predominant economic activity. Producing,
School & Society: 3 Perspectives1 The Relation of School to Society: Three School of Thought Functionalism –Schools socialize and adopt students to the.
Marxism and Globalization Marcus Niski. For Marxists… Globalization is the extension of the capitalist system across the whole world… The Capitalist system.
AN INTRODUCTION TO MARXIST THEORY
What is Marxism?. Capitalism In order to understand Marxist theory you need to understand what capitalism is. Capitalism is the social system which now.
Economics 120 Types of Economies. Three Key Questions  What is to be produced?  How is it going to be produced?  Who gets what is produced?
Major Schools of Economic Theory
April 22nd Sign in Last Day to Drop with a “W” Quick Writing
is concerned with the balance (or imbalance) of power and control and how content is shaped through the varied influence of the participants.
Karl Marx The Foundation of Critical Criminology.
The social reality of crime
CONFLICT THEORIES MARXISM and FEMINISM.
19th Century Economics edit from same title by WBPhillips.
Capitalism By 1750, British society moved further away from regulation of trade toward the free market of capitalism Capitalism = system of production,
FEUDALISM TO CAPITALISM
The Alternative Paradigm Marxist Theories. The Alternative Paradigm The alternative Paradigm rest on a different view of society That which does not accept.
 Identify Murdock’s four functions of the family.
Liberal Pluralism.
(3) A Sociology of Modernity: Benevolent Modernizations II: Education Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent.
Capitalism  Massive and unprecedented increase in wealth  Great increase of the world population and health benefits  Development of science, culture.
Cultural Marxism The Theory of Hegemony.
Government Intervention. What do we need to know… What is government intervention Arguments for and against government invention Main economic objectives.
Representation Ryan, Gemma and Phil. Karl Marx and his ideas “The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives.
B300B Policy Chapter 4 By: WASSIM ALWAN. culture, social norms and economics: some implication for policy.
1 WORK: FROM CERTAINTY TO FLEXIBILITY Graham Dawson Presentation: Dr. Faisal Al-Qahtani.
Gender Inequality: Marxist and Feminist views
Key Media theory A2 MEST 3 revision.
Sociological Theorists
Karl Marx ( ) born in Trier, Germany He developed a method of analysis called dialectical materialism, in which the clash of historical forces.
Media and Society Chapter 2.
Structural theories – conflict theory
Marxist Theory of Power
Lecture 2 Classical Marxism.
Neo-Marxism.
STARTER: 3 WAYS IN WHICH EDUCATION IS FAIR WAYS IN WHICH EDUCATION IS UNFAIR Is there a “hidden curriculum” – types of behaviour that are.
MARXISM.
Theories of the family.
Ruling class ideology. For Marxist’s what is the most effective instrument in controlling the subject classes.?
The Function of Education
Do Now Activity! On your mini whiteboards write down your response to the following questions. Remember to wait for the clap before you reveal your answer.
Unit 1: Foundations of Government
Thinkers, Beliefs, Radicalism, and Classical Liberalism.
Thinkers, Beliefs, Radicalism, and Classical Liberalism.
Pluralism Polyarchy – many groups have power in society; no one group dominates and all have power through the act of voting in representatives who.
Critical Theory Marxist Criticism.
Towards a Critique of Developmentalist: Dependency Theory
Socialism vs. Capitalism
Advertising as a process
Presentation transcript:

Sociology of Media (2) Approaches to Media Analysis I: Political Economy ( )

Overview i.Theoretical orientation ii.Ownership and monopolization iii.From Fordism to Post-Fordism iv.The role of the State: Law, Licensing and Regulation, v.Media as Institutions

The Law of Supply and Demand

Political Economy economic processes cannot be reduced to market forces only. For economic processes to take place, they have to be embedded in institutional forms (e.g. law, monetary structures) Mode of Production = Forces of Production + Relations of Production (Marx)

Nicos Poulantzas ( )

from Wikipedia Poulantzas's theory of the state was reacting against what he saw as more simplistic understandings within Marxism. Instrumentalist Marxist accounts held that the state was simply an instrument in the hands of a particular class. Poulantzas disagreed with this, because he saw the capitalist class as too focused on their individual short term profit, rather than on maintaining the class's power as a whole, to simply exercise the whole of state power in its own interest. Poulantzas argued that the state, though relatively autonomous from the capitalist class, nonetheless functions to ensure the smooth operation of capitalist society, and therefore benefits the capitalist class. In particular, he focused on how an inherently divisive system such as capitalism could co-exist with the social stability necessary for it to reproduce itself - looking in particular to nationalism as a means to overcome the class divisions within capitalism.Instrumentalistclass

(a) Increasing income: 1. selling programs to audiences (distribution) 2. advertisement revenues (selling audiences to advertisers) (distribution) 3. selling productions (or broadcasting rights) to distributors (production) 4. revenues from license fees (public sector media)

(b) Reducing costs: 1. reducing labour costs (wages, replacement with mechanical labour) 2. increasing efficiency of production, e.g. standardization

Two regimes of accumulation: Fordism : Mass Production Standardization Mass Marketing Social Class Bureaucratic Integration Life Long Career Corporate Identity Membership Post-Fordism: Diversification Flexible Specialization Niche Marketing Life Styles and Values Adhocratic Outsourcing Temporary Project Professional Identity Contract

Law (England) Libel or Defamation Law Decency Laws National Security (anti-terrorism) legislation (Official Secrecies Act)

Two Forces Shaping the Media Market State: Law + Licensing + Regulation

Media as Institutions Media as part of the state, reflected in: (a) its role as a means of government (its representational function); (b) its role as a means of control (i.e. the public sphere) and (c) it’s own conditioning by the state through law, licensing and regulation.

Three functions of the media Information Education Entertainment These were expressed by Lord Reith, the first director of the BBC at the launch of the corporation in 1923.

Information: a double-edged sword? Economics Politics Warfare

Education Function Cognitive Skills Social Skills Socialization Ideology

Entertainment Occupying time Brainwashing and Dumbing Down Activating Concern

Logic of Operation Louis Althusser: Media as an Ideological State Apparatus (reproduction of relations of domination) Michel Foucault: Media as a Panopticon (expanding systemic disciplinary power)

Surveillance and Policing