Semester 2 2025 - DUE August 2025; 100%
TRUSTED Complete, trusted solutions and
explanations.
MULTIPLE CHOICE,ASSURED EXCELLENCE
Media Studies Assignment
1. Introduction
This assignment explores key theoretical and practical aspects
of media communication, narrative structures, film theory, and
audience engagement. It is structured into four main themes
drawn from the study material. The first theme,
Communication and Media Semiotics, examines how meaning is
created and communicated through signs, including the
definition of media semiotics, the characteristics of signs, and
the four different kinds of signs, supported by relevant
examples. The second theme, Narrative Analysis, applies
Barthes’ five narrative codes, binary opposition, and narrative
progression phases to an episode from the television series
Modern Family (Season 8, Episode 19). The third theme, Film
Theory and Criticism, explores the definition of film theory,
Eisenstein’s three types of film theories, De Putter’s two forms
of criticism, and the concept of auteur directors. The final
theme, Media Audience Theory, focuses on the Uses and
Gratification Theory to explain why audiences are drawn to
, telenovelas, with specific reference to active audiences,
typologies of needs, and the distinction between gratifications
sought and gratifications obtained. Examples of media texts,
including Modern Family and selected telenovelas, are used to
illustrate key concepts.
2. Communication and Media Semiotics
2.1 Definition of Media Semiotics
Media semiotics is the study of how signs and symbols are used
within media to create meaning (Chandler, 2017). It examines
how various elements—such as words, images, sounds, and
visual codes—function as signs that convey messages to
audiences. Semiotics relates to communication because it
provides the framework for understanding how meaning is
encoded by producers and decoded by audiences, often
through culturally shared systems of interpretation (Fourie,
2017).
2.2 Characteristics of a Sign
According to Fourie (2017:50), a sign is never the real object but
represents reality. Signs have three main characteristics:
1. Arbitrariness – There is no natural connection between the
signifier and the signified; meanings are socially
constructed.