Semester 2 2025 - DUE August 2025; 100%
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1. Introduction
This essay explores four key themes from the study material:
Communication and Media Semiotics, Narrative Analysis, Film
Theory and Criticism, and Media Audience Theory. In the first
theme, the focus will be on defining media semiotics,
explaining the characteristics and types of signs, and
illustrating these concepts with practical examples. The
second theme will apply narrative analysis to an episode of
Modern Family (Season 8, Episode 19), discussing Barthes’
narrative codes, binary oppositions, and the phases of
narrative progression. The third theme will examine Film
Theory and Criticism by defining film theory, discussing Sergei
Eisenstein’s contributions, applying De Putter’s types of
criticism to a chosen film, and analysing the work of two
auteur directors. The fourth theme will explore Media
Audience Theory, particularly the Uses and Gratification
Theory, to understand why audiences are drawn to
telenovelas. Throughout the essay, examples will be used to
demonstrate theoretical concepts, including physical sign
examples, a sitcom episode, a feature film, and a telenovela.
, The aim is to integrate theoretical knowledge with real media
texts to show how meaning is created, interpreted, and
critiqued in various forms of media.
2. Communication and Media Semiotics
2.1 Media semiotics is the study of signs, symbols, and their
meanings within media texts, focusing on how these signs
communicate ideas to audiences (Fourie, 2017). It relates to
communication by providing tools for analysing how meaning
is encoded by producers and decoded by audiences.
2.2 According to Fourie (2017:50), a sign is not the actual
object but a representation of reality. The three characteristics
of a sign are:
1. Arbitrariness – the relationship between the signifier and
the signified is based on convention, not natural
connection (e.g., the word “tree” does not physically
resemble a tree).
2. Conventionality – signs rely on shared cultural
understanding for meaning.
3. Relativity – meanings can change depending on context
and audience interpretation.
2.3.1 Four kinds of signs based on the relationship between
the signifier and the referent are: