Lecture 3 - Language and Media
Lecture 3 - Language and Media
1. Introduction
2. News coverage
3. Media voices: accent, dialect and register
4. Public participation in the media
4.1. Public as participant
4.2. Public as producer
5. Mobile and online interaction
5.1 Rules and standards in new modes
5.2 Creative texting
6. Summary
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1. Introduction
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2. News coverage
• Transitivity model – used in the analysis of utterances to show how the speaker’s experience
is encoded. In the model, utterances comprise three components which are process,
participants and circumstances.
3)
1) Process, what 2) Participants, Circumstances,
kind of event that the ‘doer’ of the specifying when,
is being process / who did where, why and
described the process how of the
process
• Examples:
• The woman was hit by a car yesterday.
• Two men, a mechanic and a clerk were caught in Johor after killing a businessman.
• A teenage girl was found dead in her bedroom in Taman Setia, Klang.
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3. Media voices: accents, dialect and register
• Differences in pronunciation,
grammar and syntax.
• Two people might speak English but
Dialects one might say:
• i) He did well!
• ii) He done well!
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Register
Different registers
Three factors
can be characterized
The way language determine variation /
by their sentence
vary according to the differences in register
structure,
situation it is used. are field, tenor and
pronunciation and
mode.
vocabulary.
Mode – medium of
Tenor – style or level
Field – subject matter / communication used
of formality perform by
topic speaking, writing,
the speaker
visuals or mixture
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4. Public participation in the media
2) Citizen journalism
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4.1 Public as participant
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4.2 Public as producer
• ‘User-generated’ and ‘citizen journalism’ are terms used to describe those who are not
professional in media industry but with the new technology have become the producers of
media.
• A key consideration – citizen journalism involves an interaction between user – generated
content and mass media.
• Coverage of disasters and unexpected events of eye – witness photos and footage captured
on the cameras and mobile phones of bystanders before professional journalists arrive on the
scene.
• Examples: Tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, volcano eruption etc
• Therefore, the photos and footage taken are given to the produced broadcasts along with the
journalist’s own recordings for publishing.
• Sometimes, news gathering is collected from tweets that provide up-to-the-minute feed of
information.
• Nevertheless, it is important for public to check the source of the news for authenticity
purpose in order to ensure its trustworthiness.
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5. Mobile and online interaction
Drawbacks – misused of
technology. Eg: ‘fired by text
message’
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5.1 Rules and Standards in New Modes
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5.2 Creative Texting
Mobile phones with emoticons as standard which has become the ‘code’.
Code – a term used instead of language to refer to a linguistic system of
communication.
The use of emoticons in emails and texting has reduced the use
of standard written English.
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6. Summary
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THANK YOU
u n i t a r. my