The “mass media” has been defined in different ways to fit
various bodies of theory. Bennett overviews four traditions of media theory and
contextualizes them among each other. His purpose is to show how a definition
of the “mass media” influences expectations, presuppositions, and questions
asked about the media within a particular theory. I’m personally not so
interested in that question but Bennett’s literature review is a must-read for
people wanting to systematize their knowledge of communication and cultural
theory.
Bennett begins with the mass society tradition: a loose
grouping of mid-19th Century thinkers whose work is unified by
general themes and a common outlook, rather than by any concrete thesis. These
thinkers viewed the mass media pessimistically, as a destruction of the
traditional model of society that had hitherto worked so well for the elites.
The mass society theorists were concerned by the notion of the stupid masses
entering political conversations, disrupting moral consensus, and destabilizing
a sociopolitical “centre of authority.” They feared that a society in which
each class pursued its own interests would lead to disorder. In short, the
general outlook shared by mass society theorists was that the “tyranny of the
majority,” as the utilitarian John Stuart Mill put it, was going to spoil
everything. Some mass society theorists like Hannah Arendt and Carl Friedrich
thought mass democracy actually increased the vulnerability of the masses to
totalitarian regimes. By making people isolated, alienated, and lonely, people
would become perfect fodder, apparently, for mass movements. Historically, we
might write these theorists off as cultural elites wanting to maintain their
privileged positions in society.
From the 1930s to the 1950s, the debate on mass
communications took a turn. In this time, American sociologists tested the
theses of mass society theory. It was discovered that audiences did not
interpret media content as a homogenous mass, but rather that their views,
values, and perceptions varied depending on their churches, families, business
communities, and other groups. Subcultures were found to act as filters against
hypodermic needle persuasion. The word “mass media” was thus transformed from a
pejorative to a positive term. This was the beginning of the liberal-pluralist
tradition. In this school of thought, the mass media were seen as an important
part of the democratic process, as a way to circulate opinions other than those
of the government, creating a healthy democratic debate. The mass media were
understood to militate against the possibility of a disproportionate amount of
power centralizing among an elite few within liberal democracies. Further, the
many small factions and points of view that developed checked and countered
each other, resulting in no one group dominating over the others. The
liberal-pluralist tradition is thus consistent with audience reception studies
that examine the ways divergent interpretations of texts are formed. But they
de-emphasize the fact that mass media production is oligopolized and the
variation of opinion reflected in the mainstream is quite narrow. Historically,
we might think of the liberal-pluralist tradition as naïve and idealist, or at
least, in need of some nuance.
In 1923, the Institute for Social Research, also known as “The
Frankfurt School,” was formed. Its leading theorists (Horkheimer, Adorno,
Marcuse, Benjamin) attempted to incorporate the mass society critique into a
Marxist framework. They didn’t see media influence as consisting of the
transmission of messages, of changing mass opinion from one view to another.
The Frankfurt theorists saw the mass media as framing an individual’s entire
worldview and way of making sense of reality. This is about when the term
“ideology” began connoting the notions of bias and distortion. The Marxist
aspect of their theory is that they perceived the mass media as passing down society's dominant ideology to the lower classes. The mass society element appears in the
Frankfurt School’s examination of the culture industry. The then recent
increasing homogenization and standardization of cultural goods was accused of
eroding the bourgeois values of High Culture. Artistic production, which had
once been subversive and oppositional, had become lobotomic and empty. Thus the
mass media had made serious culture more accessible but at the cost of
stripping it of all its substance. The Frankfurt School’s approach was
generally criticized as not having any practical value to back up its theory.
Karl Popper condemned Adorno for having nothing to say.
More recently, theorists have tried to incorporate Marxist
ideas of class domination into a theory of ideology. These theorists were concerned
with the process whereby existing relations of class domination are reproduced
and perpetuated or challenged and overthrown. This has typically involved
references to Louis Althusser and, more recently, Antonio Gramsci’s theories of
ideology. In these theories, ideology is importantly active – it stresses the
social agent’s molded, individual subjective consciousness. The attempt here is
to unify the Marxist concern with top-down influence with a concept of the
active, fragmented audience.
Although I think this fourth theory is on the right track, it’s
too closely associated with Dark Side epistemology for my taste. The paradigm
could do much better if restated and restructured with new terminology and with
a basis in probabilistic epistemology and reductionism.
No comments:
Post a Comment