Semester 2 2025 - DUE August 2025; 100%
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MULTIPLE CHOICE,ASSURED EXCELLENCE
1. Introduction
This assignment explores four key themes within media
studies, namely communication and media semiotics,
narrative analysis, film theory and criticism, and media
audience theory. Each theme will be discussed in depth, with
relevant concepts defined, explained, and supported by
scholarly references. The discussion on communication and
media semiotics will examine the nature of media signs, their
characteristics, and different types, with practical examples
provided. Narrative analysis will be applied to Modern Family,
Season 8, Episode 19 (McCarthy-Miller, 2017), to demonstrate
Barthes’ five narrative codes, the concept of binary
oppositions, and the four phases of narrative progression. Film
theory and criticism will include a definition of film theory, an
exploration of Sergei Eisenstein’s three types of film theory,
and an application of De Putter’s two kinds of criticism to a
selected film. The concept of auteur directors will also be
explored through case studies of two prominent filmmakers.
Finally, the media audience theory section will focus on the
Uses and Gratification Theory to explain why audiences are
, drawn to telenovelas, differentiating between passive and
active audiences, and analysing typologies of needs. Examples
from television and film will be used throughout to illustrate
theoretical principles, ensuring a comprehensive and
integrated understanding of the topics.
2. Communication and Media Semiotics
Media semiotics is the study of signs and symbols and how
they are used to convey meaning within communication
processes (Chandler, 2017). It relates to communication by
providing the tools to decode and understand the deeper
meanings embedded in media messages, helping to explain
how audiences interpret visual and textual content beyond its
literal form. According to Fourie (2017:50), a sign “is never the
real object. It is not reality but represents and serves as a
means of referring to reality.” Signs have three key
characteristics: firstly, they are arbitrary, meaning the
relationship between the signifier and the signified is
culturally constructed; secondly, they are conventional, relying
on shared societal understanding; and thirdly, they are
relational, deriving meaning through differences from other
signs.
A sign consists of the signifier (physical form), the signified
(concept), and the referent (the actual object). Based on the
relationship between these elements, Fourie (2017) identifies