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Popular media and diversity — The Complete summary with flash cards

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This in-depth, exam-ready summary explores how identities such as gender, race, sexuality, class, dis/ability, and age are constructed, represented, and challenged in popular media culture. It synthesizes key lectures and readings from media and cultural studies, feminist theory, queer theory, postcolonial studies, and critical disability studies. The guide covers major thinkers like Stuart Hall, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Judith Butler, Paul Gilroy, and Pierre Bourdieu, alongside illustrative pop culture examples such as Euphoria, Game of Thrones, Friends, Skam, and The White Lotus. Designed for university students, this guide offers both theoretical depth and practical tools to master media and identity debates.

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Lecture 2: Concepts, Debates, & Approaches - FULL REVIEW

I. Core Concepts & Theories

●​ Identity (Richard Jenkins): How individuals/groups are distinguished from others.
●​ Identification (Richard Jenkins): Systematic process of finding
similarities/differences between individuals/groups.
●​ Essentialism: Identities are natural, biological, ahistorical; experiences universal.
●​ Social Constructionism: Identities are socially made, vary culturally/historically.
(Opposite of Essentialism).
●​ Sociocultural Diversity (Arnesen & Allan): "All kinds of differences between
individuals and groups".
●​ Identity Politics (Barker): "Forging of ‘new languages’ of identity" + action to change
social practices.
●​ Intersectionality (Kimberlé Crenshaw): How various discriminations (race, gender,
etc.) combine to create unique experiences.
○​ Structural I.: Intersection of race/gender makes non-white women's
experiences different.
○​ Political I.: Intersectionality should be basis for politics/policies.
○​ Representational I.: Cultural construction of women of color through
intersectional lens.
●​ Woke: Orig. (African American) meaning: vigilant against systemic injustice.
○​ Woke-washing: Corporate marketing using diversity, lacks true commitment.
●​ Cancel Culture (Ng): Demands accountability, withdrawal of support for problematic
acts.

II. Research Paradigms & Media Approaches

●​ Communication Sciences: Post-positivist view.
○​ Assumption 1 (Realism): Media should reflect real world (images "realistic,"
"accurate").
○​ Assumption 2 (Socialization): Media impacts perceptions/attitudes.
○​ Cultivation Theory (George Gerbner): TV dominates "symbolic
environment," cultivates societal assumptions.
○​ Symbolic Annihilation (Gaye Tuchman): Representation means social
existence; absence means symbolic annihilation.
●​ Media & Cultural Studies: Interpretive/Critical view.
○​ Assumption 1 (Culture is Ideological): Culture co-constructs hegemonic
ideologies.
○​ Assumption 2 (Complex Sense-Making) (Stuart Hall): Encoding/Decoding
model (1980); different ways to interpret text.

III. Representation & Stereotyping

●​ Politics of Representation (Stuart Hall): "Production of meaning through language".
Ideological: can maintain status quo OR struggle against hegemony.
●​ Stereotyping (Walter Lippmann): Social categorization; "define first then see";
shortcut in complex world.

, ●​ Stereotyping (Richard Dyer):
○​ Ideological Function: Consolidates social hierarchies; constructs fixed social
order.
○​ Social Types: Flexible, multi-dimensional characters.
○​ Stereotypes: One-dimensional, rigid, harmful characters.
○​ Modes of Stereotyping:
■​ Iconography: Visual/aural signs "bespeak" minority identity (e.g.,
homosexuality).
■​ Structure: Function of character in text's structures (static/dynamic).
●​ Transcoding (Stuart Hall): "Taking an existing meaning and re-appropriating it for
new meanings".
○​ Strategies: Reversing stereotypes , Inclusion of positive images , Through
the eye of representation.

IV. Main Authors (Review from 35-list)

●​ Richard Jenkins: Identity, Identification.
●​ Kimberlé Crenshaw: Intersectionality.
●​ Gerbner (George Gerbner): Cultivation Theory.
●​ Stuart Hall: Politics of Rep., Transcoding, Encoding/Decoding, Ideology.
●​ Walter Lippmann: Stereotyping.
●​ Richard Dyer: Stereotyping modes (Iconography, Structure).
●​ Gaye Tuchman: Symbolic Annihilation.
●​ (Also, brief mentions in context: Arnesen & Allan, Barker, Ng).

V. Key Examples & Relevance

●​ 2 Live Crew: Illustrates Intersectionality (feminist vs. anti-racist debate missing
nuance).
●​ Sex & The City 2: Exercise for Stereotyping (iconography & structure).
●​ This is America (Childish Gambino): Illustrates Transcoding strategies ("Through
the eye of representation") for racism/inequality.

Lecture 3: Gender - FULL REVIEW

I. Introduction Example

●​ Miranda (Sitcom): Used hyper-stereotyping to make the stereotyping process the
target, with self-deprecating humor.
○​ Aimed to question idealized femininity & challenge outdated stereotypes.
○​ Humor considered ambiguous: simultaneously emancipatory & restrictive.

II. Core Concepts: Sex, Gender & Feminisms

●​ 1.1. Disentangling Sex from Gender
○​ Sex: Biochemical/genetic structures differentiating ‘male’/‘female’ by
reproductive system/secondary sex characteristics.
■​ Debate: Is sex a continuum or a dichotomy?

, ■​ Intersex conditions: Variations in sexual biology not fitting binary
definitions.
○​ Gender: Social construction of gender categories; socially imposed
attributes/behaviours.
○​ Gender Identity: (Self-)identification with a gender category.
■​ Cisgender: Identity congruent with sex/gender assigned at birth.
■​ Transgender/Trans: Identity different from sex/gender assigned at
birth.
■​ Nonbinary: Moving beyond man/woman, masculine/feminine binary.
●​ 1.2. Masculinities & Femininities
○​ Gender Expression: Presentation of self expressing gender identity/role.
○​ Masculinities/Femininities: Cultural repertoires stipulating expectations,
roles, discourses, behaviour.
○​ Hegemonic Gender Order: Established system.
○​ Raewyn Connell: Examined different patterns of masculinities/femininities,
which are temporary/context-dependent.
■​ Hegemonic Masculinity: Occupies central, privileged position;
stabilizes gender order, incl. subordination of women. Culturally
specific norms, expressed by ideal men with institutional power.
■​ Complicit Masculinity: Men who don't embody ideal/power but don't
question patriarchal order, and benefit from it.
■​ Subordinated Masculinity: Masculinities deviating from
'normal'/'ideal' ways of acting/being a man.
■​ Marginalised Masculinity: Men discriminated against due to racial,
ethnic, or class identity.
○​ Mimi Schippers:
■​ Hegemonic Femininity: Characteristics establishing
hierarchical/complementary relation to hegemonic masculinity (inferior
to masc., superior to other fem.).
■​ Pariah Femininities: Women embodying features of hegemonic
masculinity (e.g., aggressive, promiscuous) → seen as contaminating
established binary gender relations.
■​ Alternative Femininities: Actively rejecting hegemonic ideals,
challenging complementary dominance/subordination.
●​ 1.3. Feminism(s)
○​ Provided lenses to understand/tackle inequality between men/women.
○​ 1960s: Second Wave Feminism: Emergence of distinct strands (liberal,
socialist, radical); agreed on importance of cultural construction of
womanhood.
○​ 1990s: Third Wave Feminism: Inclusive attitude toward different
experiences of women; inspired by intersectionality/queer theory.

III. Researching Gender & Pop Media Culture

●​ 2. Researching Gender & Popular Media Culture: Attention increased from 2nd
wave feminism.
○​ Three main themes emerged: Stereotypes, Ideology, Pornography.
●​ Communication Sciences (Stereotypes & Cultivation):
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