A lot of people have assumed this is going to be the most difficult concept to apply, but I don’t think it need be. If you think back to the AS TV Drama exam, when you had to look at the technical codes and how they operate, that was an exercise in applying media language analysis, so for the A2 exam if this one comes up, I’d see it as pretty similar. For moving image, the language of film and television is defined by how camera, editing, sound and mise-en-scene create meaning. Likewise an analysis of print work would involve looking at how fonts, layout, combinations of text and image as well as the actual words chosen creates meaning. Useful theory here might be Roland Barthes on semiotics- denotation and connotation and for moving image work Bordwell and Thompson
G325 Critical Perspectives B
- HOME
- SPECIFICATION
- G325 MEDIA REGULATION
- G325 Sec A: Theoretical Evaluation of Production
- G325 Sec B: Contemporary Media Issues
- A2 EVALUATION
- Eval q.1 GENRE CONVENTIONS
- Eval q. 2 COMBO OF MAIN AND ANCILLARIES
- Eval. q.3 FEEDBACK
- Eval. q. 4 TECHNOLOGY
- FILM POSTERS
- FILM MAGAZINE COVERS
- BLOG TOOLS
- FILM TRAILERS
- THEORETICAL APPROACHES
- EXAMINER'S REPORTS
- EXAMPLES OF SECTION A EXAM HELP HERE
- REVISION SESSIONS
- ADOBE INDESIGN
Thursday, 18 April 2013
CLASSWORK TIMED ESSAY: MONDAY 23 APRIL
Section 1 b) Explain how meaning is created through the use of media language in one of your productions.
Media Language
A lot of people have assumed this is going to be the most difficult concept to apply, but I don’t think it need be. If you think back to the AS TV Drama exam, when you had to look at the technical codes and how they operate, that was an exercise in applying media language analysis, so for the A2 exam if this one comes up, I’d see it as pretty similar. For moving image, the language of film and television is defined by how camera, editing, sound and mise-en-scene create meaning. Likewise an analysis of print work would involve looking at how fonts, layout, combinations of text and image as well as the actual words chosen creates meaning. Useful theory here might be Roland Barthes on semiotics- denotation and connotation and for moving image work Bordwell and Thompson
A lot of people have assumed this is going to be the most difficult concept to apply, but I don’t think it need be. If you think back to the AS TV Drama exam, when you had to look at the technical codes and how they operate, that was an exercise in applying media language analysis, so for the A2 exam if this one comes up, I’d see it as pretty similar. For moving image, the language of film and television is defined by how camera, editing, sound and mise-en-scene create meaning. Likewise an analysis of print work would involve looking at how fonts, layout, combinations of text and image as well as the actual words chosen creates meaning. Useful theory here might be Roland Barthes on semiotics- denotation and connotation and for moving image work Bordwell and Thompson
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