Cultural Studies, Media, Power, and the Truly Educated Person
Cultural studies is the ambigious interdisciplinary field, the study of how culture is created, transmitted, and understood in society. It looks at how different aspects of culture, like art, music, literature, fashion, and even food, reflect and shape the values, beliefs, and experiences of a particular group of people.
Media and Power: the relationship between media and power in contemporary society
In the video Eric Lui with the help of animation talks about the types of power and how to write the power. There are six types of the power.
In Noam Chomsky's interview on Manufacturing Consent, Chomsky argues that the mass media in the US is primarily a tool for mobilizing public support for the special interests that dominate the government and the private sector. He identifies these interests as the concentrated network of major corporations, conglomerates, and investment firms that control the major decisions in society.
For example, stock market, private firms, multinational companies, and so on controls the consent of the people through the medium of advertising, news, social media.
Chomsky also explains that the media serves two primary targets: the political class and the general population. The political class, consisting of about 20% of the population, is more educated and articulate and plays a role in decision-making. The cream of the society, goverment and highly educated intellectuals. Their consent is crucial, and they need to be deeply indoctrinated.
The remaining 80% of the population, however, are primarily concerned with following orders and not thinking critically. As Fanon classified as 'Lumpenproletarian' and 'peasant class' or Marx defined as 'peoletrait' and 'land-owners'. Chomsky outlines a propaganda model to explain how the media operates.
This model includes filters such as ownership, advertising, sourcing of information, and framing of issues. These filters work together to shape the media's output and ensure that it serves the interests of the dominant elite groups. For example advocating traditional role of women, heirarchy, justification of racism and superiority.
Chomsky argues that the media's focus on certain topics and its framing of issues are designed to maintain the status quo and prevent significant challenges to the existing power structure. He criticizes the media's role in shaping history and its tendency to prioritize certain perspectives over others.
Noam Chomsky argues that true education involves the ability to inquire and create independently, without external controls. He cites the views of the founder of the modern higher education system, William von Humboldt, who emphasized the importance of this ability for a fulfilled human being.
"It’s not important what we cover in the class; it’s important what you discover."
Chomsky believed that the focus of education should be on what students discover rather than what they cover in the classroom. According to Chomsky, being truly educated means being able to inquire and create based on the resources available, to know where to look and how to formulate serious questions, and to question standard doctrines.
Chomsky emphasizes the importance of developing the ability and cultivate these skills from kindergarten to graduate school. He believes that a well-educated person is able to deal with the challenges of the world independently and to contribute to society through their own investigations, cooperation, and solidarity with others. I beleive that truly educated person means the one who is not blind by the conventions.
I admit that it's hard to be unconventional, if students grow in the one particular enviornment under the one expert teacher still there is the scope that students strat beleving the ideas of teacher as it is. In this case educated person need many exposure and through one can be developed as "truly educated person".
The Five Filters of the Media
Imagine the media as a machine that produces news. This machine has five filters that shape what you see and hear.
Who owns the machine?
- The people who own the media want to make money.
- They will often choose stories that will make them more money.
Who pays for the machine?
- Advertisers pay for the media.
- The media will often choose stories that will please advertisers.
Advertising: Advertisers often target specific demographics, and marginalized groups and issues may not be considered as lucrative markets.
Who controls the machine?
- Powerful people and organizations can influence the media.
- They can give the media information or stop them from reporting certain stories.
Who is trying to stop the machine?
- Some people try to stop the media from reporting certain things.
- They might try to discredit journalists or spread false information.
Flack: Powerful individuals or institutions may use public relations tactics to silence or discredit marginalized voices, making it difficult for them to gain media attention.
Who is the enemy?
- The media often needs an enemy to make people afraid.
- This enemy can be a country, a group of people, or an idea.
For example, imagine you own a news channel. You want to make money, so you choose stories that will attract advertisers. Advertisers want to reach people who are interested in buying their products, so you choose stories that will appeal to them. Powerful people might try to influence your channel by giving you information or threatening to stop advertising. Some people might try to stop you from reporting certain stories by spreading false information about you or your journalists. Finally, you might need to find an enemy to make people afraid and keep them watching your channel. [This example I got from the Gemini chatboat]
In this video we can see how partisanship can distort our perception of reality and hinder our ability to make rational decisions. It discusses a study that found people's political beliefs can influence their ability to evaluate data, even when they have the necessary mathematical skills.
partisanship can lead to cognitive dissonance when group beliefs are at odds with reality, and people may be more motivated to maintain a positive relationship with their group than to perceive the world accurately. In the case of being in majority people silently obey the idea given by the mass.
Barad, Dilip. “Cultural Studies: Media, Power and Truly Educated Person.” https://blog.dilipbarad.com/2017/03/cultural-studies-media-power-and-truly.html?authuser=0. Accessed 02 10 2024.
Jones, Josh. “An Animated Introduction to Noam Chomsky's Manufacturing Consent and How the Media Creates the Illusion of Democracy.” Open Culture, 13 March 2017, https://www.openculture.com/2017/03/an-animated-introduction-to-noam-chomskys-manufacturing-consent.html. Accessed 2 October 2024.
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