Sunday, February 19, 2012

You Can't Handle the Truth!

here's something i blogged for my feminist theory & media class.  it's a little rough, but i think i make my point...hopefully.


This week’s reading of Dow’s “Introduction: The Rhetoric of Television, Criticism, and Theory” challenges the way that television is analyzed and opens the readers eyes to new opportunities when critiquing the media in general.  Dow states, “However, the motive for diversity in critical approaches should not be a search for the holy grail of truth but an exploration, with unavoidable twists and turns, toward the many, sometimes contradictory, possibilities of understanding.”  This is a statement that holds a lot of power. 
Critics often become so easily enraptured and consumed by the artifact that they are analyzing that sometimes an overall perspective is lost.  Many criticisms tend to have tunnel vision in the sense that they disregard other perspective or other issues that the particular criticism can uncover.  What Dow is challenging with her statement is for critics to open their eyes and to not take themselves so seriously.  There is no doubt that a traditional critical standpoint is valued in all aspects of the world of academia, however being staunch and static in research can limit one’s opportunities to discover new perspectives.  Dow is merely pointing out that sometimes our pursuit to discover the truth, we sometimes neglect other important factors in our research.  Finding the truth is important, but it should not always be the main focus so that it blinds us to other research opportunities.
Dow is hinting that a stagnant view of criticism can limit the impact it has on the audience.  She also wants us to consider how the research that is conducted will impact the audience, as well as the role that the audience plays in the research.  Dow believes that we should give the audience credit.  They are not mere passive viewers, but instead are often engaged in the media outlets which they are consuming.  There is no doubt that there are indeed passive viewers out there, however Dow is simply saying that scholars do themselves and the audience a disservice by over-generalizing and assuming that all consumers of television and media are passive.
Dow calls into question how scholars view the audience because it is reflective of the critics’ quest for seeking the ultimate truth.  If we are consumed with finding the truth, but only seek it from a certain perspective, than are we really going to find the capital “t” truth?  The question I bring to the table is who are we to determine what is true and what isn’t?  How are we to know each audience members frame of reference and past experiences?  What is true for us as scholars and as an audience will not necessarily be true for other audiences.  As scholars, we should not limit ourselves by assuming that the audience we are analyzing is in capable of understanding the mediated messages we are receiving.  Condit as quoted by Dow articulates it best by saying, “…The masses may not be cultural dupes, but they are not necessarily skilled rhetors.”
While we should not doubt the intelligence level of the audience being analyzed, we should also recognize that they are subject to and fall victim to the hegemonic messages that the media produces.  Dow states, “I question the quality or power of that resistance in the face of the repetitive and consistently reinforced hegemonic media messages that they consume.”  We should not assume that the audience is unaware of the power that the media has over them, however we would be naïve to believe that the constant exposure to these messages and ideas leaves no impact.
There are all things that we as scholars need to consider when conducting our research.  We need to recognize that it is important to find truth as it is defined to us, however we cannot become blinded by our own ambition and we cannot discredit our audience.  If we can handle our “truth,” so can they.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

flex those muscles

i've been experiencing a lot of cognitive dissonance over this blog. i like to consider myself a writer. sometimes i will openly admit that what i write is good, other times not so much. however, how can i call myself a writer if i don't write? i can't, that's how. i feel as if my skill as a writer has been slowly ebbing away from me.  if you have seen the latest harry potter film i imagine my skill leaking from me somewhat like snape's memories leak from him when he's dying.

i'm in grad school so i do a lot of writing, but it's not the same.  the type of writing i do in my papers for school is the not type of writing that i'm accustomed to.  it's more systematic and structured.  sometimes i imagine it lacking life, which isn't entirely true. i truly enjoy writing my papers for school, mainly because i'm so interested in the content matter.  it's just that grad school writing is exercising a different writing muscle and i need to make sure that i'm exercising all of my muscles.

all of this is to say that i'm going to force myself to blog once a week.  even if it is just rambling like this post is going to end up being. i'm not dumb enough to set myself up for failure by saying that i'll blog once a day. i don't have time for that and i doubt i have enough things to say for that. but i will blog once a week.  in rhetoric class we read an article that states that if you want to be a good writer you have to write. i know it sounds like i'm stating the obvious but it's true.  i can't expect my skill of writing to develop by not doing anything about it.

on a completely different note i'm extremely excited about all of the papers/projects that i am working on this semester. i have picked the overlapping theme of studying masculinity. i hope that through all of these projects i can hone in on what really appeals to me and utilize that as my thesis. i'm in three classes this semester: communication theory, qualitative research, and feminism and the media. for communication theory i'm going to create a theoretical study framework using social cognitive theory and looking at the masculinity that male student athletes portray and if that portrayal is something that is cultivated in them through the media and other influences.

for my qualitative research class i'm observing the pick-up basketball games at the student rec center and the culture that surrounds that.  i'm hoping to see themes of masculinity there as well as other things.  currently i'm noticing a trend of aggressiveness and somewhat hurtful communication and trash talk.

lastly, for my rhet. class i'm going to critically analyze "modern family" and the ways that masculinity is portrayed in the different characters.  i have to narrow it down to probably two or three characters.  right now i'm thinking that the dynamic between cam and mitch and then claire and phil will be the most interesting.  especially in claire and phil because between the two of the claire demonstrates the most stereotypical masculine traits. i'm excited. it's going to be a fun paper to write.

now that i've rambled and started stretching out my writing muscles i will end the ridiculously pointless post.