Representation refers to the construction in any medium
(especially the mass media) of aspects of ‘reality’ such as people, places,
objects, events, cultural identities and other abstract concepts. Such
representations may be in speech or writing as well as still or moving pictures
The term refers to the processes involved as well as to its
products. For instance, in relation to the key markers of identity - Class,
Age, Gender and Ethnicity (the 'cage' of identity) - representation involves
not only how identities are represented (or rather constructed) within the text
but also how they are constructed in the processes of production and reception
by people whose identities are also differentially marked in relation to such
demographic factors.
Consider, for instance, the issue of 'the gaze'. How do
men look at images of women, women at men, men at men and women at women?
Representation In The Media
When studying the media it is
vital to remember this - every media form, from a home video to a glossy
magazine, is a representation of someone's concept of existence, codified into
a series of signs and symbols which can be read by an audience. However, it is
important to note that without the media, our perception of reality would be
very limited, and that we, as an audience, need these artificial texts to
mediate our view of the world, in other words we need the media to make sense
of reality. Therefore representation is a fluid, two-way process: producers
position a text somewhere in relation to reality and audiences assess a text on
its relationship to reality.
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