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Learning unit 1

Learning unit 1. Global Communication Theories Session 1-4 . MO1 Evaluate the theories related to global communication. MO3 Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the politics of global communication. Module outcome covered.

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Learning unit 1

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  1. Learning unit 1 Global Communication Theories Session 1-4

  2. MO1 • Evaluate the theories related to global communication. MO3 • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the politics of global communication. Module outcome covered

  3. Normative theories of global communication and their shortcomings. • Comparing contrasting media with specific reference to Soviet Russia and its influence on global communication. • Issues relevant to mainstream media. • Globalisation, media imperialism and hybridisation. Learning Content:

  4. Explain normative theories of various media systems using examples to further your understanding. • Discuss shortcomings of these normative theories. • Explain the role and influence the Soviet media system has had on understanding media internationally. • Demonstrate a basic knowledge of the issues relevant to mainstream media. • Define globalisation with respect to its effect on South Africa. • Examine the effects of “media imperialism”. • Explain the term “hybridisation”. Learning Objectives:

  5. Prescribed text pp.22-38. • Additional notes are given in the Introduction to this Learning Unit to supplement the prescribed textbook. • Pages to focus on: pp.23-30, 33-35. Material to be used :

  6. Before the first class, be sure that you read Sections 1-4 of this Learning Unit, and pp.22-38 in the textbook. • As you read these sections, see if you can find the answers to the following questions: • o What is meant by “samizdat” • o Do media really explain economic crises suitably? • o Do the media suggest ways of improving economic crises? How to prepare for this Learning Unit:

  7. Branston, G. and Stafford, R. 1999. The media student’s book. London: Routledge. [Chapter 20 only – Globalisation] • Herbst, J. 2005. Africa and the challenge of globalization. Conference paper presented at the Conference on Globalization and Economic Success: Policy Options for Africa. Singapore: 7-8 October. Recommended Additional Reading

  8. Media theories, also known as the “normative approach”. • Basic understanding of them as well as any shortcomings that are addressed. • The history and role of the Soviet Union with reference to the history of media systems as we know them today. the distinctive features of Western media systems and determine the similarities and differences therein. • “globalisation” is discussed,; media imperialism and hybridization Introduction

  9.  Explain normative theories of various media systems using examples to further your understanding. • Authoritarian • Soviet • Libertarian • Social responsibility • Development media theory • Democratic-participant Normative theories

  10. effectively meant dictatorial. • Can justify advance censorship and punishment for deviation. • Authoritarian principles may even express the popular will under some conditions, such as a nation at war. • Generally designed to protect the established social order and its agents, setting clear and close limits to media freedom. Authoritarian

  11. The communist dictatorships at that time in Russia. • Assigned the media a role as collective agitator, propagandist and educator in the building of communism. • Propaganda - form of communication aimed at changing, influencing or maintaining people’s attitudes, opinions or beliefs in a way that is initially aligned with what the sender of the message intended. • The main principle was subordination of the media to the Communist Party – the only legitimate voice and agent of the working class. • It did not favour free expression, but it did propose a positive role for the media in society and in the world, with a strong emphasis on culture and information and on the task of economic and social development. Soviet

  12. . between the Soviet bloc dictatorships and “authoritarian” regimes lay in the particular political ideology that served as a foundation for the Soviet regimes, namely Communism, which claimed to show the way to construct a just and equal society Prime difference

  13. was “free market-based” in which the best would be recognised and the worst would fail. • In one respect it is a simple extension to the (newspaper) press of the fundamental individual rights to freedom of opinion, speech, religion, and assembly. • The nearest approximation to truth will emerge from the competitive exposure to alternative viewpoints, and progress for society will depend on the choice of “right” over “wrong” solutions. Libertarian

  14. The contrast with both of the previous two categories was, clearly, between media systems ruled by state regulation and censorship, and media systems ruled by capitalist moneymaking priorities The contrast

  15. referred to a different order of reality, namely, media operating within a capitalist dynamic but simultaneously committed to serving the public’s needs. These needs were for a watchdog on government and business malpractice and for a steady flow of reliable information to help the citizens of a democracy make up their minds on matters of public concern. This theory involved the view that media ownership and operation are a form of public trust, rather than an unlimited private franchise. For the privately owned media, social responsibility theory has been expressed and applied mainly in the form of codes of professional journalistic standards, ethics and conduct or in various kinds of council or tribunal for dealing with individual complaints against the press, or by way of public commissions of inquiry into particular media. Most such councils have been organised by the press themselves, a key feature of the theory being its emphasis on self-regulation. Social responsibility

  16. Meant that media addressed issues of poverty, health care, literacy, and education, particularly in Third World settings. • Media were defined as being vitally responsible for informing the public. • Held to an important role in fostering a sense of nationhood in countries with highly disparate groups in the population, territories often artificially created by European colonialists as recently as the late 19th century. • . Development media theory

  17. The development media theory was intended to recognise the fact that societies undergoing a transition from underdevelopment and colonialism to independence and better material conditions often lack the infrastructure, money, traditions, professional skills and even audiences • It emphasised the following goals: the primacy of the national development task; the pursuit of cultural and informational autonomy; support for democracy; and solidarity with other developing countries. • Because of the priority given to these ends, limited resources available for media can legitimately be allocated by government, and journalistic freedom can also be restricted.

  18. Typically designated local, small-scale, and more democratically organised media, such as community radio or public access video, with their staff and producers having considerable input into editorial decisions. • This alone sharply distinguished them from mainstream media of all kinds. • In addition, participatory media were defined as closely involved with the on-going life of the communities they served so that their readers or listeners could also have considerable influence over editorial policies. Democratic-participant

  19. Sometimes these media shared the same development goals as the development model but not on any kind of authoritative top-down basis or as agents of government development policies • Public participation and a democratic process were central to their operation. • This democratic-participant media theory supports the right to relevant local information, the right to answer back and the right to use the new means of communication for interaction and social action in small-scale settings of community, interest group or subculture.

  20.  Discuss shortcomings of these normative theories. Shortcomings

  21. Aside from their typical failure to engage with entertainment, their distinction among Soviet, authoritarian, and development models was very blurred in practice. • The chief problem with the six theories approach goes back to the deontic, or normative, dimension of the theories.

  22. The two terms used previously – categories and models – illustrate this problem, for though they can be synonyms, model implies something that ought to be followed. • While media, like any cultural organisation, clearly do follow certain guiding principles, what media executives claim those principles are and how the same media executives behave in actuality may often be light-years apart.

  23. Communist media in the former Soviet bloc claimed their purpose was to serve the general public, yet when the opportunity arose in those countries in the late 1980s, public criticism of the cover-ups and distortions of Communist media became a tidal wave. • In the social responsibility model, objectivity is trumpeted as the journalists’ core principle.

  24. Yet, as media researchers in a number of countries have demonstrated, journalists readily place patriotism above objectivity and define objectivity in practice as the middle point between two opposing views, often those of rival political parties, not troubling to question whether truth may lie somewhere else. • Development media were often steered away from sensitive topics by arrogant, autocratic regimes in the name of national unity and the need to focus on bettering economic production.

  25. Explain the role and influence the Soviet media system has had on understanding media internationally. • Many lessons learnt in media operations • Soviet 1917- 1991 • The features persisted-bankers being media bosses • Overlap with media under dictatorship • One party state communism • Impact on media freedom Role and influence the Soviet media

  26. Taiwan broadcast media governed by the state –national development and unit • World media system ,privatisation, liberalisation • Economically and politically stable countries system (USA and Britain point of reference • Canada, France, Italy, Japan, Germans, China, USA and Britain • Now we are busy studying system USA and Britain forgetting Russia • Some stable economies countries not in G8 are stable Denmark , New Zealand have positive but not considered • Even crisis torn countries have positives but their audience might not aware or understand media operations

  27. Demonstrate a basic knowledge of the issues relevant to mainstream media. • Economic Crises, politics power, dramatic social transition and small scale alternative media Issues relevant

  28. Russia collapse of Soviet Bloc • ESAP economic structural adjustment programme-IMF-(1990s) • To sacrifice debts payment –loans and interests accruing • Because of ruthless capitalists logic(no helping but robbing people) • Impact to life expectancy, decline living standards, stagnation of productivity, Economic Crises,

  29. 2008-9 world recession • In Russia during post Soviet it was easier to point to IMF but now can they or they look for scapegoats like immigrants Gypisies, Chinese Jewish and Muslims • Oil revenues , manufacturing of guns-G8 • So what are the strategies in place to correct economic crises

  30. Communist media seen as the opposite of media in WEST • Communism was like censorship and repression in the name of ideal justice • Capitalist won in the end • State media functioning in dictatorship • Soviet established ideological priorities Politics Power,

  31. Kept close watch over any subversive tendencies, media bosses chose from party executives with loyaly • KBG-political police • Typewrites were licenced by state to travel where material came from • Photocopiers were governed by microscopic detail and bugging technology • New technology in the end made it diifficult

  32. But authentic news was via conversations-rumour, opinion • The official truth that media blarred out was known • Trust in mainstream media?

  33. Read on your own Dramatic social transition

  34. Radical media-Samizdat-self published • In Russia it referred to hand circulated pamphlets, poems, essays, plays, short stories novels audio and video cassettes from 1960 0nwards • Containing banned material by Soviet regime • Writing or distributing carried a sentence with hard labour • Religious, national, ecological reformist Small scale alternative media

  35. Collapse of Soviet was un thinkable • Determination, jail terms, shortwave radio software's for radical media worked • BBC world service, Radio Free, radio Liberty and Voice of America • Messages on air in urban cities even though it was jammed by government • Social movement opposing war in Iraq anti Vietnam War, • Media power is no longer in government hands but the people

  36. Define globalisation with respect to its effect on South Africa. • Globalisation shortens the distance between people all over the world by the electronic communication (Flew 2002). • This word refers a phenomenon through which individuals are no longer constrained in communicating by physical distance. globalisation

  37. Inter-connected economies; • This era had seen an unprecedented opening of the market. • Globalisation has led to a deep interconnected freedom of trade between nations. • E-commerce has meant more economies of more countries interact and react to each other. This cointerconnected freedom of trade between nations. nstant connection with every part of the world could lead to economic problems.

  38. E-commerce has meant more economies of more countries interact and react to each other. • This constant connection with every part of the world could lead to negative consequences. • Should there be economic collapse in one (1) part of the world the results of this are felt worldwide. Consider how markets rise and fall on the back of news events worldwide, due to the immediacy of communication.

  39. Outsourcing • now common practice of first world multinational corporations manufacturing goods in an environment that facilitates cheaper production costs and usually less restrictive labour policies for sale in first world nations. ―sophisticated sweatshops‖ (Friedman, 2008). Outsourcing

  40. More trade in imported goods, consider the clothing industry in South African which has been virtually shut down by foreign exports. • Countries are losing more and more in the manufacturing sector due to cheaper imports being sourced. • This in turn creates an uneven job market, whilst the trained and educational qualification holders (doctors, lawyers, journalists) can compete for jobs in this global arena, the factory worker who is out of a job due to imports being cheaper, cannot. Market Flooding

  41. New Media have become associated with the process of cultural globalisation because it allows interaction between people with very different lifestyles and from very different cultures • . Language has ceased to become a barrier with the advent of picture sharing. • Homogenisation of World Culture • The largest problem created is the homogenisation of world culture, this refers to the act of making same. • Globalisation has led to the loss of small indigenous culture and languages. CulturalProblems

  42. Fourie talks of how this process is inherently skewed in favour of the country that enjoys greater economic advantage and greater technology; he speaks of the concept of cultural imperialism. • Cultural Appropriation. • individuals from outside a particular indigenous cultural group appropriating and utilising aspects of that culture’s language, (2) art, rituals etc. without understanding the value and meaning thereof.

  43. act of a nation imposing its cultural values onto another, usually weaker, nation; new media facilitates this by allowing ideas, art and thought from the so called first world countries to be more readily available than that of the third world. • Most of the technology supporting new media (has originated in first world countries. Cultural Imperialism

  44. Explain the term “hybridization/Cultural convergence • A fusion of cultures; a melting together of different authentic cultures. • this refers to the act of making same. • Globalisation has led to the loss of small indigenous cultures and languages. • This is a crisis as more niche crafts arts and languages are rendered extinct in the pursuit of new media interaction with the world. • The growing similarity between national cultures, including their beliefs, values and aspirations Homogenisation of World Culture;

  45. Working within groups, discuss the merits of globalisation. Is globalisation something that has helped South Africa in terms of development, or is it a process that has done more harm than good? Give specific examples of both the positive and negative consequences of globalisation on South Africa. Izimvo Exchange 1

  46. As a class, debate the notion mentioned in the textbook (Kamalipour, 2007, p. 33) that “globalization more or less means Americanization”. Do you agree with this statement? Izimvo Exchange 2

  47. Examine the effects of “media imperialism”. • A theory that suggests that dominant media coverage from large, developed countries can cause smaller, developing countries to lose their identities due to the dominance of the media from the developed country media imperialism

  48. A broad concept that can encompass a wide range of issues – such as global media flow and international trade in services. • With specific reference to the practice of promoting and imposing one country’s electronic products (such as films, television etc.) on others.

  49. Purpose: • The purpose of this task is for you to become familiar with what is meant by an “economic crisis” and to what extent South African media portray such crises. Activity 1

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