Abstract
English is a mass medium. All languages are mass media. The new mass media—film, radio, TV—are new languages their grammars as yet unknown. Each codifies reality differently; each conceals a unique metaphysics. Of the new languages, TV comes closest to drama and ritual. It combines music and art, language and gesture, rhetoric and color. It favors simultaneity of visual and auditory images. Books and movies only pretend uncertainty, but live TV retains this vital aspect of life. Seen on TV, the fire in the 1952 Democratic Convention threatened briefly to become a conflagration; seen on newsreel, it was history, without potentiality. Just as radio helped bring back inflection in speech, so film and TV are aiding us in the recovery of gesture and facial awareness—a rich, colorful language, conveying moods and emotions, happenings and characters, even thoughts, none of which could be properly packaged in words.
Keywords
Related Publications
Peaceniks and Warmongers' Framing Fracas on the Home Front: Dominant and Opposition Discourse Interaction during the Persian Gulf Crisis
Research on collective action framing has tended to focus on inter- and intramovement interpretation of grievances, often assuming that hegemonic frames are taken for granted. T...
Movement Cycles and the Nazi Party
Following insights of social movement theory, this article looks at movement cycles in the initial development of the Nazi Party. Specifically, it explores the framing strategie...
Freezing out the public: Elite and media framing of the U.S. anti-nuclear movement
(1993). Freezing out the public: Elite and media framing of the U.S. anti‐nuclear movement. Political Communication: Vol. 10, No. 2, pp. 155-173.
Institutional Constraints on Social Movement "Frame Extension": Shifts in the Legislative Agenda of the American Federation of Labor, 1881-1955
Journal Article Institutional Constraints on Social Movement “Frame Extension”: Shifts in the Legislative Agenda of the American Federation of Labor, 1881–1955 Get access Daniel...
Constructing identity and oppositional knowledge: The framing practices of peace movement organizations during the Persian gulf war
Social movement organizations (SMOs) engage in the formation of public policy and social beliefs by framing issues and events for the public. These framing activities may offer ...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2018
- Type
- book-chapter
- Pages
- 255-261
- Citations
- 45
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.4324/9781315189840-37