Comprehensive Study Guide
Chapters 1 · 2 · 4
Media & Culture · The Internet & Digital Media · Sound Recording & Popular Music
Spring 2025
,CHAPTER 1: Media & Culture
1.1 What Is Culture?
Culture encompasses the forms and systems of expression that a society uses to make
sense of daily life. Media and culture are deeply intertwined: media products are cultural
products, and studying media means studying culture.
• Encompasses art, literature, music, film, television, social media, and everyday
communication practices
• Helps us understand how societies make meaning and build identity
1.2 The Five Communication Eras
Media history can be organized into five broad eras, each defined by new
communication technologies that transformed how people shared information.
1. Oral Era
• Knowledge transmitted through spoken word, storytelling, and memorization
• Culture passed down through tradition and communal memory
• Highly local; reach was limited to physical presence
2. Written Era
• Enabled records to extend beyond individual memory
• Early manuscripts were expensive and rare — access was limited mainly to
Church and elites
• Scribes manually copied texts; literacy was a privilege, not a norm
3. Print Era (c. 1450s–1800s)
• Johannes Gutenberg's printing press (~1450s) enabled mass production of text
• Books, pamphlets, and newspapers became affordable and widespread
• Literacy rates spread across social classes; knowledge was democratized
• Enabled the Protestant Reformation, Scientific Revolution, and rise of
nationalism
4. Electronic Era (1800s–1990s)
• Telegraph, telephone, radio, film, and television transformed communication
• Messages could travel at the speed of electricity across vast distances
, • Mass media emerged: one sender broadcasting to millions of receivers
simultaneously
• Centralized production; audiences were largely passive receivers
5. Digital Era (1990s–Present)
• Information encoded in binary code (ones and zeros)
• Enabled convergence: previously separate media formats merged into one
device
• Internet and smartphones transformed passive audiences into active participants
• Boundaries between producers and consumers blurred (prosumers)
1.3 Convergence
• Technological convergence: Formerly distinct media formats — music, video,
text, phone calls — all merging into single platforms and devices (e.g.,
smartphones)
• Economic convergence: Media companies merging with each other to control
multiple media types under one corporate roof (e.g., Disney owning ABC, ESPN,
Hulu)
1.4 Mass Media vs. Social Media
Traditional mass media operated on a one-to-many model: a single broadcaster sent
content to a large, largely anonymous audience. Digital and social media shifted this
toward many-to-many communication.
• Mass media: Centralized production, passive audiences, gatekeeping by editors
and executives
• Social media: Decentralized production, active audiences, user-generated
content, algorithmic curation
1.5 Niche Nation vs. Mass Nation
• Mass nation: The 20th century model where most Americans consumed the
same small number of TV channels, radio stations, and newspapers. Shared
culture was common.
• Niche nation: The digital era model where people self-select into specific
interest communities. Media products cater to fragmented audiences with
specific tastes. Shared cultural reference points have weakened.
1.6 The Three Media Roles
Each of us plays three overlapping roles in our relationship to media: