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MCQUAIL’S FOUR KINDS OF THEORIES:Social scientific theory, Critical theory

<< LIMITATIONS OF THE PRESS THEORY:Concentration and monopoly, Commercialism
PROPAGANDA THEORIES:Origin of Propaganda, Engineering of Consent, Behaviorism >>
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
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LESSON 09
MCQUAIL'S FOUR KINDS OF THEORIES
Social science is controversial because it suggests causal relationships between things in the
environment people's attitudes, values and behaviors. Society and media relationship is a causal
relationship.
Theory is any set of ideas which can help make sense of a phenomenon, guide action or predict a
consequence.
Theories help us understand or explain phenomena we observe in social world. They are the net with
which we catch the world or the way in which we sense of the social life.
Theories are stories about how and why events occur... Scientific theories begin with the assumption
that the universe, including the social universe created by acting human beings, reveals certain basic and
fundamental properties that explain the ebb and flow of events in specific process. Theory is also
defined as scholars' best representation of some state of affairs based on systematic observation.
According to McQuail there are four kinds of theories
1. Social scientific theory
2. Normative theory
3. Operational theory
4. Everyday theory
Social scientific theory
·  These theories are based on and guide empirical research
·  Permit statements about nature, workings and effects of mass communication
·  These statements or hypothesis are tested by making systematic and objective observations
regarding mass media, media use and media influence.
·  E.g. TV and aggression link.
Normative theory
·  This form of theories explains how ideal media ought to operate within a specific system of
social values.
·  Such theory usually stems from the broader social philosophy or ideology of a given society.
·  E.g. theories of the press's role in a democracy would most likely fit here as would theories of
media in an Islamic republic or an authoritarian.
Operational theory
·  This kind of theory is normative but with a practical bent.
·  It involves not holy HOW media should ideally operate but how they CAN operate to meet
specific ends.
·  Such as how to select news, please audience, effective advertising keep within the limits of
what society permits and relate effectively to sources and audiences
Everyday or common-sense theory
·  This refers to the knowledge we all have from our long experience with media which enables us
to understand what is going on,
·  How a medium might fit into our daily lives,
·  How its content is intended to be read, how we like to read it
·  What are differences in different media (genre in content).
·  On the basis of such theory we make consistent choices from tastes and make judgments.
·  This affects the media influence on the individuals
·  This causes public debate about the media
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
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Other commentators on mass communication have suggested other means of understand about mediated
communication.
Critical theory
·  A loose confederation of ideas held together by a common interest
in the
quality of
communication and human life
·  Concerned with inequality and oppression
·  They not only observe they also criticize
·  Concerned with the conflict of interest in the society and the
·  Ways communication perpetuates domination of one group over another
·  Media effects a historical perspective
·  History of the scientific study of Media effects.
Media effects - a historical perspective
·  Examine the concern for media effects in historical perspective and the historical evidence for
actual media effects on opinions and behaviors since the invention of the printing press.
·  The society's elite which recognized potential societal influences from exposure to the printed
word. Such as the religious and the government elites that is why:
1. used the press to for their own ends
2. attempted to censorship
3. control publications and thereby silence opposition voices
4. Such fears even exist today in totalitarian societies, in which leaders suppress or control
media to maintain power.
In 1559, Pope Paul IV issued an Index of Prohibited Books which included Protestant books along with
occult and pornography books and opposition books---- Martin Luther defied the pope and used the
printing press to spread Reformation literature to the masses.... And so rebels and imprisonment and
punishments. In the 16th century King Henry VII felt so threatened that he prosecuted those who
published material offensive to the crown. Insisted on licensing and held English press under strict
control. In late 1700s in the United States Benjamin Franklin --- Philadelphia `Aurora'--leading voice
for the cause of Republicanism in the United States.
So press affects the `public opinion'. A judge said that:
"Give to any set of men the command of the press and you give them the command of the country, for
you give them the command of public opinion, which commands everything."
Public concern for "indecent' material
·  Concern for the ill effects of media violence and sexually explicit material
·  In the early 19th century `penny press'--reports on the activities of arrested thieves, drunks
prostitutes and other miscreants and low lives of society became immensely popular among
many readers ­ and so became a target of extreme criticism.
·  Sensationalism promoted
·  Competitors in print
·  So on several occasions angry readers attacked the press---"moral war"
It was in the later half of the 19th century when new technologies and the spread of literacy made
possible the development of remarkable new forms of communication ­ mass communication. New
media technologies were invented and popularized and apprehensions were that:
New technology would disrupt peaceful, rural communities
Force people to in urban areas to serve as a convenient work force in large factories,
mines or bureaucracies
For some mass media symbolized every thing that was wrong in the urban life
Media lowered class tastes
Brings political unrest
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
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Violated cultural norms
The old social order of the landed aristocracy was crumbling an was its culture and
politics
·
Dominant perspective that emerged during this period was of mass society theory. Among the
originators of mass society notions was a German sociologist, Ferdinand Tonnies. He tried to
differentiate between the earlier form of social organization and the European society as it
existed in the late 19th century. The two terms he used were:-
1. Gemeinshaft or folk society
2. Gesellshaft or modern, industrial society
Gemeinshaft or folk society
People were bound by strong ties of family, tradition, rigid social roles- basic social institutions were
very powerful---- he argued that folk society yearn for the order and meaning and they often find life in
modern societies to be troublesome and without meaning. in Modern or industrial societies people are
often bound by relatively weak social institutions base upon rational choices rather than tradition.
French Sociologist, Emile Durkheim also offered more or less a similar theory about the dichotomy in
the society.
1. Mechanical solidarity- compared folk societies to machines in which people were little more than
cogs. The machines are ordered and durable, but people were forced by collective consensus to perform
traditional social roles--bound by consensus to one another like the parts of a great engine.
2. Organic solidarity- he compared the modern social orders to animals. As they grow, animals
undergo profound changes in their physical form. The animals are made up of cell and cell serve very
different purposes and also undergo changes. Similarly in modern social orders the people grow and
changes along with the society at large- for their survival. So organic solidarity is characterized by
specialization, division of labor and interdependence and in this regard media role was appreciated to
permit important new social bonds formation.
Later the ails (decline of common morality) of the society must be cured by social pathologist-
sociologists- not by reverting to old social orders but scientifically chosen forms would solve the
problems inherent in modernity.
Characteristics of the mass society and mass audience
Large number
Widely dispersed
Non-interactive and anonymous
Heterogeneous
Not organized or self acting
And so the theory made a several basic assumption about individuals and the role of media and the
nature of social change.
1. first assumption was that media is cancerous force within society and must be purged or
totally restructured- govt control ­ Nazi- BBC--also George Orwell novel in 1948
`1984' Big brother watches every one, televised propaganda was used to foment hatred
against external enemies and promote love of Big Brother
2. Media have the power to reach out and directly influence the minds of average people-
direct effects assumptions ­ usually negative- average citizens are portrayed as helpless
and are being manipulated by the power of the media e.g. violence on TV, or in comics
or heavy metal music and average teenagers
3. once peoples minds are corrupted by media, all sorts of bad, long-term consequences
result-bringing not only ruin to individual lives but also certain social problems on a
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
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vast scale-every social problem is attributed to the media e.g. teenage delinquents
disaffected housewives- seeing to many soap operas- drug addicts
4. Average people are vulnerable to media because they have been cut off and isolated
from traditional social institutions that previously protected them from manipulation.
The argument is, in modern societies when an individual is isolated and is striped off
his traditional protective family structures provided by the traditional community he
started believing whatever media communicated to them. Media became the most
trusted and valued source of messages about politics, entertainment, religion, education
and on and on e.g. story telling replaced by movies, television and videos.
5. Mass media inevitably debase higher forms of culture, bringing about a general decline
in civilization.
This criticism was held by Western cultural and educational elites- in decades following the
enlightenment (18th century European social and Philosophical movement that stressed rational thought)
these elites thought themselves as responsible for nurturing and promulgating higher forms of culture,
not only within their own societies but also around the world. (White, male, western, protestant) so
media was viewed as a threat to high culture- e.g. rather than glorifying gangsters highlight great leaders
or religious leaders etc. media should not lower people tastes by giving them what they want but should
give what they need. (BBC)
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Table of Contents:
  1. COMMUNICATION:Nature of communication, Transactional approach, Communication is symbolic:
  2. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (I):Positivistic Perspective, Critical Perspective
  3. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (II):Empirical problems, Conceptual problems
  4. FROM COMMUNICATION TO MASS COMMUNICATION MODELS:Channel
  5. NORMATIVE THEORIES:Authoritarian Theory, Libertarian Theory, Limitations
  6. HUTCHINS COMMISSION ON FREEDOM, CHICAGO SCHOOL & BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY THEORY
  7. CIVIC JOURNALISM, DEVELOPMENT MEDIA THEORY & DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPANT THEORY
  8. LIMITATIONS OF THE PRESS THEORY:Concentration and monopoly, Commercialism
  9. MCQUAIL’S FOUR KINDS OF THEORIES:Social scientific theory, Critical theory
  10. PROPAGANDA THEORIES:Origin of Propaganda, Engineering of Consent, Behaviorism
  11. PARADIGM SHIFT & TWO STEP FLOW OF INFORMATION
  12. MIDDLE RANGE THEORIES:Background, Functional Analysis Approach, Elite Pluralism
  13. KLAPPER’S PHENOMENSITIC THEORY:Klapper’s Generalizations, Criticism
  14. DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION THEORY:Innovators, Early adopters
  15. CHALLENGING THE DOMINANT PARADIGM:Catharsis Social learning Social cognitive theory
  16. SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEROY:Symbolizing Capacity, MODELLING
  17. MODELING FROM MASS MEDIA:Recent research, Summary, PRIMING EFFECTS
  18. PRIMING EFFECT:Conceptual Roots, Perceived meaning, Percieved justifiability
  19. CULTIVATION OF PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL REALITY:History
  20. SYSTEMS THEORIES OF COMMUNICATION PROCESSES:System
  21. EMERGENCE OF CRITICAL & CULTURAL THEORIES OF MASS COMMUNICATION
  22. REVISION:Positivistic perspective, Interpretive Perspective, Inductive approach
  23. CRITICAL THEORIES & ROLE OF MASS COMMUNICATION IN A SOCIETY -THE MEDIATION OF SOCIAL RELATIONS
  24. ROLE OF MASS MEDIA IN SOCIAL ORDER & MARXIST THEORY:Positive View
  25. KEY PRINCIPLES USED IN MARXISM:Materialism, Class Struggle, Superstructure
  26. CONSUMER SOCIETY:Role of mass media in alienation, Summary of Marxism
  27. COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE:Neo Marxism, Characteristics of Culture
  28. HEGEMONY:What exactly is the meaning of "hegemony"?
  29. CULTURE INDUSTRY:Gramscianism on Communications Matters
  30. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY I:Internationalization, Vertical Integration
  31. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY II:Diversification, Instrumental
  32. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY III:Criticism, Power of Advertising
  33. AGENDA SETTING THEORY:A change in thinking, First empirical test
  34. FRAMING & SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Spiral of Silence, Assessing public opinion
  35. SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Fear of isolation, Assessing public opinion, Micro-level
  36. MARSHALL MCLUHAN: THE MEDIUM IS THE MESSAGE AND MASSAGE
  37. KNOWLEDGE GAP THEORY:Criticism on Marshal McLuhan
  38. MEDIA SYSTEM DEPENDENCY THEORY:Media System Dependency Theory
  39. USES AND GRATIFICATIONS THEORY:Methods
  40. RECEPTION THEORY
  41. FRAMING AND FRAME ANALYSIS:Information Processing Theory, Summing up
  42. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION I:Communication Science, Direct channels
  43. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION II:Communication Maxims, Emotions
  44. GLOBALIZATION AND MEDIA:Mediated Communication, Post Modernism
  45. REVISION:Microscopic Theories, Mediation of Social Relations