Difference between revisions of "TV Structure (Discussion)"
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==Definitions== | ==Definitions== | ||
#Flow | #Flow | ||
− | #*Who originally articulated it? What does it mean when applied to TV? | + | #*Who originally articulated it? What does it mean when applied to "linear" TV? (See the programming grid on p. 12.) |
− | #Polysemy | + | #*How does "nonlinear" TV encourage flow? |
+ | #Polysemy and TV programs as "texts" | ||
#*"poly-semy" = "many meanings" | #*"poly-semy" = "many meanings" | ||
#*Sort of rhymes with "polygamy" | #*Sort of rhymes with "polygamy" | ||
− | |||
#*What does "structured polysemy" mean? | #*What does "structured polysemy" mean? | ||
#Discourse | #Discourse | ||
#*How does theorist John Fiske use the term? | #*How does theorist John Fiske use the term? | ||
− | #*What is | + | #**"a language or system of representation that has developed socially in order to make and circulate a coherent '''set of meanings''' about an important topic area. These meanings serve the interests of that section of society within which the discourse originates. |
+ | |||
+ | ==Application to ''Schitt's Creek'' and ''The Andy Griffith Show''== | ||
+ | #''Schitt's Creek'': fish-out-of-water trope. Similar shows? | ||
+ | #*How are rich people represented? What set of values (discourse) are attached to them? How are small-town people represented? What discourse is attached to them? | ||
+ | #*We can see polysemy in action in ''Schitt's Creek'' and ''The Andy Griffith Show''. | ||
== Bibliography == | == Bibliography == |
Latest revision as of 18:11, 25 August 2020
Definitions
- Flow
- Who originally articulated it? What does it mean when applied to "linear" TV? (See the programming grid on p. 12.)
- How does "nonlinear" TV encourage flow?
- Polysemy and TV programs as "texts"
- "poly-semy" = "many meanings"
- Sort of rhymes with "polygamy"
- What does "structured polysemy" mean?
- Discourse
- How does theorist John Fiske use the term?
- "a language or system of representation that has developed socially in order to make and circulate a coherent set of meanings about an important topic area. These meanings serve the interests of that section of society within which the discourse originates.
- How does theorist John Fiske use the term?
Application to Schitt's Creek and The Andy Griffith Show
- Schitt's Creek: fish-out-of-water trope. Similar shows?
- How are rich people represented? What set of values (discourse) are attached to them? How are small-town people represented? What discourse is attached to them?
- We can see polysemy in action in Schitt's Creek and The Andy Griffith Show.
Bibliography
- Jeremy G. Butler, Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture (New York: Routledge, 2018).