100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Text and Image in News and Advertising

Rating
-
Sold
6
Pages
36
Uploaded on
01-12-2020
Written in
2020/2021

A summary of all the articles that are used for the master's course Text and Image in News and Advertising

Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
December 1, 2020
Number of pages
36
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Summarized articles


Andersen, L. P. (2003). Conceptualising Television Advertising. In F. Hansen & L. B. Christensen
(Eds.), Branding and Advertising (pp. 284-305). Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business
School Press.

Bock, M. A. (2016). Showing versus telling: Comparing online video from newspaper and
television websites. Journalism, 17(4), 493-510.

Kim, K., Lee, S., & Choi, Y. K. (2019). Image proximity in advertising appeals: Spatial distance and
product types. Journal of Business Research 99, 490-497. doi:
10.1016/j.jbusres.2017.08.031

Kress, G.R., and Van Leeuwen, Theo (2006). Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design (2nd
ed.). Chapters 2 and 3. London: Taylor & Francis. Available as ebook
at http://ub.vu.nlLinks to an external site..

Kuiken, J., Schuth, A., Spitters, M., & Marx, M. (2017). Effective headlines of newspaper articles in
a digital environment. Digital Journalism, 1-15. doi:10.1080/21670811.2017.1279978

Lagerwerf, L., Timmerman, C., & Bosschaert, A. (2016). Incongruity in news headings: Readers'
choices and resulting cognitions. Journalism Practice, 10(6), 782-804.

Molek-Kozakowska, K. (2013). Towards a pragma-linguistic framework for the study of
sensationalism in news headlines. Discourse & Communication, 7(2), 173-197.

Phillips, B. J., & McQuarrie, E. F. (2004). Beyond visual metaphor: A new typology of visual
Rhetoric in advertising. Marketing theory, 4(1-2), 113-136.

Phillips, B.J. and McQuarrie, E.F. (2014). Visual rhetoric and international advertising. In Cheng,
H. (ed.), The handbook of international advertising research (pp. 238-250). Hoboken, NJ:
John Wiley & Sons Inc. (available via doi:Â 10.1002/9781118378465.ch12).

Powell, T. E., Boomgaarden, H. G., De Swert, K., & de Vreese, C. H. (2015). A clearer picture: The
contribution of visuals and text to framing effects. Journal of Communication, 65(6), 997-
1017.

Šorm, E., & Steen, G. J. (2013). Processing visual metaphor: A study in thinking out
loud. Metaphor and the Social World, 3(1), 1-34.

Sternadori, M. M., & Wise, K. (2010). Men and women read news differently: The effects of story
structure on the cognitive processing of text. Journal of Media Psychology: Theories,
Methods, and Applications, 22(1), 14.

Van Enschot, R., & Hoeken, H. (2015). The occurrence and effects of verbal and visual anchoring

, of tropes on the perceived comprehensibility and liking of TV commercials. Journal of
Advertising, 44(1), 25-36.

Van Mulken, M., van Hooft, A., & Nederstigt, U. (2014). Finding the tipping point: Visual
metaphor and conceptual complexity in advertising. Journal of Advertising, 43(4), 333-
343.

Van Weelden, L., Cozijn, R., Maes, A., & Schilperoord, J. (2010). Perceptual Similarity in Visual
Metaphor Processing. Paper presented at the AAAI Spring Symposium: Cognitive Shape
Processing.

Kress & Van Leeuwen (2006): Narrative Representations: Designing social action
(Chapter 2)

Vector = the contrast between foreground and background
Visual structures = never merely formal  they have an important semantic dimension

Participants:
- Interactive = the participants in the act of communication  who watch the image
- Represented = the participants who constitute the subject matter of the communication
 who are in the image

Represented participants:
- Formal art theory:
o Participants = volumes and masses with a distinct weight or gravitational pull
o Processes = vectors, tensions or dynamic forces
- Functional semiotic theory:
o Actor, goal and recipient
o Transaction = something the actor does to the goal

Analytical structure:
- Carrier and attribute instead of actor and goal
- The way participants fit together to make up a larger whole
- The carrier = represents the whole
- Possessive attributes = represents the parts

Participants in the image:
- Conjoined = when the entities are separated
- Compounded = welded together, still distinct components of the whole
- Fusion = the separate identities of the participants have disappeared

Elongation:
- Vertical = more pronounced distinction between top and bottom
- Horizontal:
o Causes a shape to lean towards the kind of structure in which what is positioned
on the left is presented as ‘given’ = already familiar to the reader

, o What is positioned on the right is presented as ‘new’ = information not yet
known to the reader

Visual processes:
- Narrative:
o When participants are connected by a vector = diagonal line in the image
o Actor = participants from whom or which the vector departs, may be fused with
the vector
- Conceptual = representing participants in terms of their class, structure or meaning

Narrative processes:
- Action processes:
o Transactional = actor  vector  goal:
 Uni-directional = one participant is actor, the other is the goal
 Bidirectional:
 Each participant playing now the role of actor, now the role of
goal
 Not clear if it is simultaneously or in succession
o Non-transactional = actor  vector  no goal
o Event = no actor  vector  goal
o Major process = the big action
o Minor process = the smaller action that is embedded in the major process
- Reactional processes:
o Transactional = reacter  vector  phenomenom
o Non-transactional = reacter  vector  non phenomenom
- Speech process and mental processes:
o Thought and dialogue balloons in comic strips
o Projective structure = the content or the balloon are not represented directly
- Conversion processes:
o Relay:
 Participant who functions both as actor and goal
 Vector  actor  vector  goal  vector  actor
 Common in representations of natural events
- Geometrical symbolism:
o Pictorial or abstract patterns as processes
- Circumstances:
o Secondary participants that are related to main participants
o Could be left out without affecting the basic proposition realized by the narrative
pattern
o Sorts of circumstances:
 Locative circumstances:
 Relate other participants to a specific participant (setting)
 Contrast between foreground and background:
o The participants in the foreground overlap and partially
obscure the setting
o The setting is drawn or painted in less detail

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
lottebartelds Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
139
Member since
8 year
Number of followers
119
Documents
14
Last sold
2 weeks ago

4.1

17 reviews

5
8
4
5
3
3
2
0
1
1

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions