1 / 13

Print – Form & Audience

Print – Form & Audience. AS Media Studies. Recap. What does denotation and connotation mean? How do we analyse mode of address? What are the three approaches to analysing audiences? What two terms do we use to categorise audiences? What does ‘mediation’ mean? .

dewey
Télécharger la présentation

Print – Form & Audience

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Print – Form & Audience AS Media Studies

  2. Recap • What does denotation and connotation mean? • How do we analyse mode of address? • What are the three approaches to analysing audiences? • What two terms do we use to categorise audiences? • What does ‘mediation’ mean?

  3. Analysing Form (Print) • Three main types of print • Newspapers • Magazines • Print Adverts • All of the share some characteristics • Some terms differ between form • Consider how each product communicates to its audience

  4. Newspapers • Masthead • Headline • Dateline • Image • Sub-heads • Secondary Story • By line • Adverts • Colour • Mode of Address • Name of paper • Main story • Date of issue • Main image • Secondary headlines • Main secondary story • Author of the story • Link to audience • Consider representation • Addressing the audience

  5. Newspapers

  6. Magazines • Masthead • Selling Line • Dateline • Image • Headline • Mode of Address • Colour • Sponsorship/Promos • Name of magazine • Slogan tied to name • Date of issue • Main image on issue • Main story covered • Addressing the audience • Consider representation • Link to audience

  7. Magazines

  8. Print Adverts • Logo • Slogan • Image • Layout • Mode of Address • Typography • Copy • Brand association • Memorable catchphrase • Main image used • Positioning of text and image • Addressing the audience • Style & colour of text • Main text used in ad

  9. Print Adverts

  10. Points to consider • What is the print product trying to say? • Who is the print product appealing to? • How is the product eye catching? • How does it compare with other products you have seen?

  11. Task • In groups, apply a label to each part of the print product • Consider the meaning of the text • Link this to the target audience • May want to compare with other products in the market • Be prepared to present this back to the class

  12. Summary • What are the main points to consider when analysing a print product? • What labels do we find on a newspaper that we don’t find on a magazine? • What do we mean by anchorage? • Why is mode of address important in the analysis of print products? • How might we link institutions and representation to form and audience?

More Related