OCR A2 Media Studies – G325
SECTION B COLLECTIVE IDENTITY
OCR state: “Candidates may analyse the
representation of and/or the collective identity of one or more group (s) of
people. Candidates
might explore combinations of any media representation across two media, or two
different representations across two media”.
This resource focuses on the representation
of youth and its
impact on collective
media identity and is
not an exemplar exam response - students hopefully will be able to use the
resource as stimulus, both in terms of analysis, debate and applying theory.
In the 2-hour exam (1 hour of
which you will be writing your Collective Media Identity response) you will
choose one essay from two:
Examples of Past Media and Collective Identity Questions
·
Analyse the impact of media
representation on the collective identity of one or more groups of people.
·
Compare the different ways in which one or more groups of
people have been represented by the media.
·
Analyse the ways in which at
least one group of people is ‘mediated’.
·
Discuss the social implications
of media in relation to collective identity. You may refer to one group of
people or more in your answer.
·
“The media does not construct
collective identity, they merely reflect it”. Discuss.
·
Analyse the ways in which the
media represent one group of people you have studied.
·
“Media representations are
complex, not simple and straightforward”. How far do you agree with this
statement in reference to the collective media group you have studied?
·
How far does the representation
of a social group change over time? Refer to at least two media in your answer.
·
To what extent is human
identity increasingly ‘mediated’?
Collective identity implies a homogenous
group, each with common interests and a similar lifestyle.
Representation is the way in which the media mediate,
repackage or ‘re-present’ individuals, people, places and social groups to
audiences. Anything can be a representation. Theorists like Richard Dyer argue
there are political and social reasons for maintaining a hegemonic collective
identity in perpetuating social divisions, maintaining the dominant culture and
legitimising inequality. Hegemonic assumptions about collective identity are
often reinforced and circulated by the media as ‘common sense’ and this can
lead to marginalisation and can
also embed ideological beliefs e.g. the
myth of older age and its association with wisdom. This in turn can be
underpinned by moral panics – wayward
youth culture was seen to blame for the 2011 London riots and applying Stanley
Cohen’s appropriation from Wilkins – 1964 of the concept deviancy
amplification, youth was demonised in tabloid, mid market tabloid and
television news coverage.
Changes in technology and the liberalisation of social
values has led to more pluralistic
representations however. Web 2.0 has
changed the face of media and technology empowering youth more, not just in
relation to the manifest rise of
youth entrepreneurs. It suggests a more confident identity and a more valued
contribution to society than archaiccultural stereotypes.
David Gauntlett argues that the idea of identity is “complicated” and that
“everyone’s got one” with the added suggestion that the idea of a collective
identity is slowly being eroded – this would link with the idea of the young ‘prosumer’ as both
consumer and producer of media, exploring digital parameters and sharing media
via social networking. David Buckingham approaches the concept of identity in a
slightly different way suggesting that it is the way we relate to, or ‘fit in’
with those around us. This in turn could relate to notions of the
disintegration of youth sub cultures, prevalent historically but now perhaps
recognising the power of the individual and with identity as a “unique marker
of a person”.
Cultural stereotypes and moral
panics still remain however but arguably are as less obvious than before. Passive computer
game culture, obesity, young female drinkers and smokers, unemployment and
general social deviance are all still recurring though and are often used to
blame for problems within society. Quadrophenia is a 1979
film that can be used as a historical frame of reference to explore the
changing representation of youth culture – using a 1964 event on Brighton
seafront as a visually iconic, recognisable
narrative the film builds to a climax by recreating the well known fight
between two traditionally opposed youth sub cultures - the Mods and the
Rockers. Stanley Cohen described the event as a moral panic that was used to
show how youth had become ‘out of control’ but in the film it could be argued
elements of these sub cultures are represented as glamorous and aspirational. Produced
by The Who, the film had a primary objective to entertain target audiences and
as such, although themes and issues are explored, particularly through the
character of Jimmy it is a musical journey as much as a spiritual one. A young
Ray Winstone plays a biker while Sting (Ace Face) is represented as the
ultimate Mod with his Vespa GS 160 scooter that Jimmy drools over; his good
looks, smart dress, attitude and the ability to pay his fine in court
immediately by cheque.
This representation is later
‘smashed’ with Jimmy seeing the Ace Face for what he is as a Bell Boy in a
hotel, running around catering for the dominant classes which leads to his
complete break away from any structure or support mechanisms whether family,
girlfriend or youth sub culture. Older, middle class representations in Quadrophenia reflect
Gramsci’s concept of cultural
hegemony – middle class lives are seen
normal, natural and commonsense while the behavior of Jimmy and his friends is
seen as ‘different’ and unacceptable with social class as much as youth
underpinning. This struggle for acceptability changes over time in as much as
the negative representations of age and social class in 1979 is seen
differently in more contemporary television teen dramas such as Skins (E4, 2007
– 2013) and Misfits (E4 2009 –
2013) and British films such as Fish Tank (2009) and The
Selfish Giant (2013).
The idea of spectatorship and the encodingand decoding of,
according to Stuart Hall dominant
preferred meanings is also
important with interpretations varying.
Jimmy, for example could be seen
as a more contemporary representation of youth (in the end) looking to break
away from his social, and in the end cultural straightjacket with which he
becomes so embittered and disappointed. In the
21st century his mental illness
and problems potentially would be identified but in Quadrophenia he
resembles notions of difference and the outsider as he reflects and obsesses
over his own mod identity which leads ultimately, applying Taijfel and Turner
to his marginalisation from the collective group (the Mods) to which being part
of was so
important. Jimmy is semi suicidal, pill pops and in a final scene, the dominant
reading of which is that he takes his own life by riding the Ace Face’s scooter
off a cliff provides audience with a negotiated
or oppositional reading – Jimmy
instead is symbolically trashing the culture of the Mod and with it, his
collective identity. He is seen at the beginning of the film walking away from
the cliff further anchoring his
individualism with the realisation that youth culture and the politics of youth
is built on fragile foundations.
In Subculture:
The Meaning of Style, Dick Hebdige posits the idea that youth sub
culture maintains divisions in society identifying two stereotypes – youth as
fun and youth as trouble. In The
Selfish Giant, an independent social
realist film distributed in 2013 the
latter ‘trouble’ stereotype is explored – it portrays the dysfunctional lives
of two young boys, Arbor and Swifty who steal copper cable for Kitten, the
unscrupulous boss of a scrap yard in Bradford, west Yorkshire. The film
compares well with Fish Tank as two films
from the same genre focusing on the representation of youth and regional
identity but also for British film, seemingly unable again to detach itself
from issues of social class. The
Selfish Giant explores the innocence of childhood, myths surrounding this
construct and the idea of consequences. Both boys attend school but Arbor is
permanently excluded and both have as priorities making money, long before they
would be stereotypically seen as legitimately on the job market. Arbor actually
gives some of the money he makes to his family in a reversal of parental
expectations.
The film stops short of developing a macro
narrative on the problems faced across the
UK in impoverished areas where young boys will risk their lives stealing cable
from railway tracks and other hazardous areas like behind power stations. At
the same time youth is represented as arrogant, selfish, aggressive, deviant
and criminal but Arbor and Swifty are also framed as kind, emotive and
vulnerable with the key criminal in the film the adult owner of the scrap yard
who exploits them. Skins, on
occasion offers similar narratives to encode a challenging representation of
initially deviant youth but as victims of adult
crime. In series four, episode one audiences immediately are introduced to
youth culture through drugs and club culture but soon into the episode we see a
morally correct young DJ challenging his unethical club owner boss who on a
regular basis has no problem with having his club flaunting health and safety
guidelines in terms of numbers allowed in.
The Selfish Giant has
parallels with the 2007-2014 long running Barnardos ‘Believe
in Children’ campaign,
also social realism which asks the public to challenge the aggressive, cultural
stereotypes they are being presented with in the poster campaign and think
again about the vulnerability of youth. Martin Hoyles in The
Politics of Childhood examines
how and why children have gradually been separated from the adult world of
work, in turn leading to a form of marginalisation where their role in society
is stereotypically to be ‘looked after’ having no economic value (the Barnardos
children are represented as marginalised as everyone has turned their back on
them).
Under no circumstances is Hoyles suggesting a return to child
labour but points out that media representations of childhood commonly conform
to stereotypical assumptions while a large proportion of young people earn a
small amount of money to sustain themselves and to facilitate independence. In The
Selfish Giant and in Barnardos
advertising Acland’s‘ideology of protection’ can be
studied with Arbor and Swifty promoting the collective notion that young people
are in need of constant surveillance and monitoring, allowing society and the
state to have more control over them. The two boys in the film strongly
challenge this collective ideology on one level but in terms of narrative
outcomes it arguably is reinforced with Arbor hiding under his bed and refusing
to come out until the Swifty’s Mum (Swifty has just been fatally electrocuted
while with Arbor stealing cable) appears in a scene that suggests emotional
understanding and forgiveness.
In Fish Tank,
representations of youth are similar. The more middle class Connor exploits Mia
sexually and she is seen in a victim role, despite her manifest aggressive
behavior in a similar way that Arbor and Swifty are exploited by Kitten. Her
family, like Arbor and Connor’s is also dysfunctional and the
film takes a ‘Broken Britain’ approach to representations of family and social
class. Mia is an interesting character in that her youthful vulnerability is
evident and is given over to audiences as equally as her anti social behavior –
this references Martin Barker’s ideas of how moral panics of deviant youth
culture are often challenged through good and bad deeds. Mia’s positive
feelings for her sister are apparent and her symbolic desire to free a horse
she thinks will be killed by Billy and his brothers is admirable (the role of
horses is also important in The
Selfish Giant). Andrea Arnold positions
audiences however into decoding
intelligent, sympathetic readings of poverty, neglect, abuse and notions of the
difficulties faced by single parent families on a low income and the idea of
consequences. Through the mise-en-scene the film
represents all of the youth chav stereotype signifiers but arguably suggests a
more pluralistic representation.
Using Stuart Hall’s framework,
this dominant or oppositional reading would be dependent on audience – I
witnessed a white, middle class west London independent cinema audience
laughing at the
representations, aghast that people ‘could live like that’ while a BFI audience
fully understood the social realist conventions and the
director’s encoded meanings. The film had a limited theatrical release in only
40 cinemas and for some audiences it was reassuring in how it perpetuated
cultural stereotypes, applying Dyer’s theory again of legitimising ideas of
difference to maintain unequal power relations in society. Mia could be seen as
‘belonging’ to a collective group of dysfunctional, urban teenagers with no
value in society, economically or socially. The representation of this
collective group is frequently alluded to in the right wing press, e.g. during
and after the London riots and similar images are circulated and reinforced,
often deliberately placed inbinary opposition to more
‘normal’ mainstream culture. Levi Strauss’ framework is useful in understanding
this with middle aged, more respectable representations seen as the dominant
culture in teen dramas such as Waterloo
Road and mainstream soap operas likeEastenders.
Like Jimmy in Quadrophenia however,
Mia manages to break of out this spiral (hence the title ‘Fish Tank’) and is
empowered to escape from her life when narrative resolution sees Mia driving
away with her boyfriend to a new, albeit uncertain life in Wales. Tyler, her
younger sister waves her farewell uttering the immortal line, “Say hello to the
whales for me”. Tyler is also wayward in that she drinks, smokes, swears but
has more of an emotional, dependent loyalty to her mother and ironically is
seen in some scenes ‘telling Mia off’ for not attending meetings with the local
education authority about getting her back into school. Youth culture in Fish Tank on one
level is seen as empowering despite the fact that Mia’s childhood ‘innocence’
has been destroyed by her upbringing as she challenges societal norms, escapes
from a recognised collective identity and builds her own future.
Fish Tank, Kidulthood (2006) and Adulthood (2008)
reflect the recent trending of social realism towards youth audiences – central protagonists of social
realist films have always been young, angry and alienated but potentially a
more compassionate reading is becoming evident. An oppositional reading to this
could reference the aspirational genre
hybridisation of recent
social realist films like Shifty, Ill
Manors and Shank with the
gangster genre. The deviant threat of criminal youth culture could potentially
be amplified by the hybridisation with a negative collective urban group
reinforced – passive consumption by youth audiences remains a possibility but
there are moral messages encoded into the films. Many contemporary social
realist films have moral closure e.g. Shaun turning his back on racism at the end
of This is England or Ricky’s
younger brother Curtis symbolically turning his back on gun crime in Bullet
Boy. In Kidulthood, Trevor
pays the ultimate price for exploring his individualism with collective
identity a key theme of the film in relation to youth and gang culture.
The representation of age is also subject to biological and
social constructions. Youth culture is mediated through media representations
to an audience who read potential encoded meaning. The TV teen drama Waterloo
Road is an interesting text that
explores this concept as it main narrative function – the main characters in
the drama are school children and teachers, often teachers ‘saving’ and looking
after their charges with parents rarely seen throughout the nine series. A
latent meaning from Waterloo
Road, and on occasional manifest is how the programme takes a
critical approach to parenting, often blaming parents within the narrative for
the anti social behavior of the children. Originally set in Rochdale (Greater
Manchester) it again, like many other British media representations of youth
makes clear correlations with deviant, anti social behavior linking with
working class culture. The programme moved from a dysfunctional school in
Rochdale to an independent academy in Greenock, Scotland for the eighth series
but for the ninth series currently airing (as of February 2014) the school has
lost its benefactor and has returned to a comprehensive status.
Waterloo Road in its
ninth series presents audiences with exaggerated narratives that deal with hyper
real, although potentially realist scenarios including a teacher
discovering a pupil is suffering from neglect, finding out her brother is
dealing cocaine from their family home, a kidnapping by a supply teacher,
alcoholism and social exclusion – Gabriella, a pupil from a privileged middle
class family who has recently been excluded from school arrives in Greenock as
a form of ‘tough love’ metered out to her by her parents. Other themes explored
over the years have included homosexuality, racism, rape, cancer, divorce and
suicide; all directly involving the children in the school. The programme
borrows from soap opera conventions in terms of familiarity with character and
setting also the dramatic nature of the representations encoding at times a
form of hegemonic cultural stereotyping (common for mainstream
texts aimed at mass audiences).
Waterloo Road concerns
itself with negative and positive representations of youth culture with an
emphasis on the negative. David Buckingham, in Youth,
Identity and Digital Media explores the idea of deviance and
delinquency as a social problem which legitimises various forms of treatments
e.g. the work of social, educational and clinical agencies that seek to
rehabilitate troublesome youth. ‘Problems’ are omnipresent in the drama,
normalising the traumatic world of the teenager by way of hegemonic
representations suggesting even that narrative events are a form of rites of
passage. While good drama is not always born from ‘normal’, non-dramatic representations Waterloo
Road perpetuates the idea of ‘youth as
trouble’ and successfully marginalises working class youth culture into a
collective identity.
On the other side of the social class spectrum, Outnumbered is a
British situation comedy based in west London that focuses on the role of the
children within a middle class, barely functional family. Sue and Pete are
literally outnumbered by their children who do not conform and engage in
stereotypically adult dialogue with their parents, suggesting a form of
pluralistic representation. It is worth remembering however the fact that the
programme follows mainstream genre sitcom conventions and is scheduled on BBC1.
Audiences are positioned into understanding the innocence of childhood and into
‘feeling the love’ in that there is a clear feel good element to the show as
the two central parent protagonists
actually like each other which is a key appeal – cynically the
show has surveillance aspects to
it and it is actually promoting the ideology of a
middle class, nuclear family lifestyle. Although the children on one level
challenge cultural stereotypes they exist within the safety and parameters of a
stable family environment. To explore representations of youth in British
comedy further it is often worth turning to C4 and E4 for more alternative
approaches that potentially offer a more obvious critique of hegemonic
constructs revealing collective identity.
Misfits for
example was a science fiction comedy drama broadcast on E4 between 2009 and
2013 about a group of young offenders sentenced to work in a community
programme service where they obtain supernatural powers. On one level, the
comedy presents audiences with the familiar idea of ASBO teens (audience
identification) but represents them in a likeable way. By giving them
superpowers it directly contradicts the negative stereotype, offering audiences
a point of view from the protagonists themselves. As with parents in Waterloo
Road adult roles are represented
negatively with characters like probation officers being represented as
monsters – this leads audiences onto a latent preferred meaning that what is in
fact monstrous is the negative representations of youth in society and the
whole idea of stereotyping. Again linked in with working class culture, the
programme is a genuine site of struggle exploring societal hegemonic constructs
through humour. As with any text however, the audience is crucial and as with
all E4 programing, the positive representation of youth culture may be
explained by the niche 15-35 target audience.
Film and television, despite social networking and viral
interactivity are still
one-way narratives that either challenge, reinforce (or sometimes both) the
idea of youth and collective identity. Perhaps looking at digital technology and
developing further the role of the prosumer is a way of analysing the changing
representation of youth culture in society with young people constantly
exploiting new commercial opportunities. Memes are quite
an interesting construct as a shared representation and Facebook also makes a
perfect case study to discuss notions of the construction of one’s own
identity. Michael Wesch suggests the idea of peer to peer sharing has led the
to fragmentation and implosion of traditional youth identity. Henry Jenkins
reinforces this by challenging the dominant, mainstream belief that internet
communication reduces social skills by stating instead, that users are actively
participating in multiple communication. Without end loading this resource with
theoretical input this in turn would support David Buckingham’s argument of the
fragmentation of traditional collective identity. Digital technology, of all
media is fundamentally changing the concept of collective identity while
traditional media still mediates cultural stereotypes but dependent on audience
and context. Audiences still expect these representations but are increasingly
challenged by moves towards self-construction and pluralism within a changing
hegemonic framework.
Mini Glossary
of Terms
·
Homogenous Group:
A group that all have the same characteristics
·
Mediation:
The selection and construction of material in how it is given over to audiences
via editing and point of view
·
Hegemony:
Traditional stereotypes that are reinforced and circulated as common sense to
audiences
·
Marginisalisation:
How stereotyping can lead to someone or a social group being ‘placed’ on the
outside of accepted cultural norms
·
Ideology:
An overarching set of ideas often uses as a form of social control
·
Moral Panics:
Issues in society that often lead to the blaming, and marginalisation of a
scapegoat
·
Deviancy Amplification:
Associated with moral panics, this explains how the media exaggerate a negative
representation to ensure a dominant shared reading
·
Liberalisation:
A more diverse, tolerant, equally acceptable approach
·
Pluralism:
Again, more liberal suggesting and range of different, challenging
representations
·
Web 2.0:
Interactive internet media e.g. blogs and social networking
·
Manifest:
Obvious, on the surface meaning
·
Cultural Stereotyping:
The stereotyping of social groups in society by the media
·
Prosumer:
A producer and consumer of media
·
Passive Audiences:
Audiences that accept and do not challenge representations
·
Iconic:
Well-known and respected
·
Aspiration:
Looking up to something or somebody
·
Encoding/Decoding:
Putting meaning in, taking meaning out
·
Dominant, Negotiated and
Oppositional Readings: The intended meaning of a text,
where meaning is uncertain or where audience have decoded a completely
different reading
·
Anchorage:
How meaning is made more definite
·
Binary Oppositions:
Where representations are deliberately different to construct further meaning
·
Latent Meaning:
Less obvious meaning
·
Memes:
Internet ‘stars’
OCR A2 Media
Studies
G325 Section
B: Contemporary Media Issues
Media and
Collective Identity Exemplar A Grade Response
Analyse the
impact of media representation on the collective identity of one or more groups
of people.
Collective identity implies a homogenous group, each with common
interests and a similar lifestyle. Representation is the way in which the media
mediate, repackage or ‘re-present’
individuals, people, places and social groups to audiences. Anything can be a representation. Theorists
like Richard Dyer argue there are political and social
reasons for maintaining a hegemonic
collective identity in perpetuating social divisions, maintaining the dominant
culture and legitimising inequality. Hegemonic assumptions about collective identity
are often reinforced and circulated by the media as ‘common sense’ and this can lead to marginalisation and can also embed ideological beliefs e.g. the myth of older
age and its association with wisdom. This is turn can underpinned by moral panics – wayward youth culture was seen to blame for
the 2011 London riots and applying Stanley Cohen’s appropriation from Wilkins –
1964 of the concept deviancy
amplification, youth was demonised in tabloid, mid-market tabloid and
television news coverage.
Changes in technology and the liberalisation of social values has led
to more pluralistic representations
however. Web 2.0 has changed the
face of media and technology empowering youth more, not just in relation to the manifest
rise of youth entrepreneurs. It suggests a more confident identity and a
more valued contribution to society than archaic cultural stereotypes. David Gauntlett argues that the idea of
identity is “complicated” and that “everyone’s got one” with the added
suggestion that the idea of a collective identity is slowly being eroded – this
would link with the idea of the young ‘prosumer’
as both consumer and producer of media, exploring digital parameters and
sharing media via social networking. David Buckingham approaches the concept of
identity in a slightly different way suggesting that it is the way we relate
to, or ‘fit in’ with those around us. This in turn could relate to notions of
the disintegration of youth sub cultures, prevalent historically but now
perhaps recognising the power of the individual and with identity as a “unique
marker of a person”.
Cultural stereotypes and moral panics still
remain however but arguably are as less obvious than before. Passive computer game culture, obesity,
young female drinkers and smokers, unemployment and general social deviance are
all still recurring though and are often used to blame for problems within
society. Quadrophenia is a 1979 film
that can be used as a historical frame of reference to explore the changing
representation of youth culture – using a 1964 event on Brighton seafront as a
visually iconic, recognisable
narrative the film builds to a climax by recreating the well-known fight
between two traditionally opposed youth sub cultures - the Mods and the
Rockers. Stanley Cohen described the event as a moral panic that was used to
show how youth had become ‘out of control’ but in the film it could be argued
elements of these sub cultures are represented as glamourous and aspirational. The struggle of youth for
acceptability changes over time in as much as the negative representations of
age and social class in 1979 is seen differently in more contemporary
television teen dramas such as Skins
(E4, 2007 – 2013) and Misfits (E4
2009 – 2013) and British films such as Fish
Tank (2009) and The Selfish Giant
(2013). The idea of spectatorship and
the encoding and decoding of, according to Stuart Hall dominant preferred meanings is also
important with interpretations varying.
In Sub
Culture: The Meaning of Style, Dick Hebdige posits the idea that youth sub
culture maintains divisions in society identifying two stereotypes – youth as
fun and youth as trouble. In The Selfish
Giant, an independent social realist
film distributed in 2013 the latter ‘trouble’ stereotype is explored – it
portrays the dysfunctional lives of two young boys, Arbor and Swifty who steal
copper cable for Kitten, the unscrupulous boss of a scrap yard in Bradford,
west Yorkshire. The film compares well with Fish
Tank as two films from the same genre focusing on the representation of
youth and regional identity but also for British film, applying Gramsci’s
theory of cultural hegemony is seemingly unable again to detach itself from
issues of social class. The Selfish Giant
explores the innocence of childhood, myths surrounding this construct and the
idea of consequences. Both boys attend school but Arbor is permanently excluded
and both have as priorities making money, long before they would be
stereotypically seen as legitimately on the job market. Arbor actually gives
some of the money he makes to his family in a reversal of parental
expectations.
The film stops short of developing a macro narrative on the problems faced
across the UK in impoverished areas where young boys will risk their lives
stealing cable from railway tracks and other hazardous areas like behind power
stations. At the same time youth is represented as arrogant, selfish,
aggressive, deviant and criminal but Arbor and Swifty are also framed as kind,
emotive and vulnerable with the key criminal in the film the adult owner of the
scrap yard who exploits them. Skins,
on occasion offers similar narratives to encode a challenging representation of
initially deviant youth but as victims of
adult crime. In series four, episode one audiences immediately are introduced
to youth culture through drugs and club culture but soon into the episode we
see a morally correct young DJ challenging his unethical club owner boss who on
a regular basis has no problem with having his club flaunting health and safety
guidelines in terms of numbers allowed in.
Martin Hoyles in The Politics of Childhood examines how and why children have
gradually been separated from the adult world of work, in turn leading to a
form of marginalisation where their role in society is stereotypically to be
‘looked after’ having no economic value (Arbor and Swifty are represented as
marginalized but have economic value). Under no circumstances is Hoyles
suggesting a return to child labour but points out that media representations
of childhood commonly conform to stereotypical assumptions while a large
proportion of young people earn a small amount of money to sustain themselves
and to facilitate independence. In The
Selfish Giant Acland’s ‘ideology of
protection’ can be studied with Arbor and Swifty promoting the collective
notion that young people are in need of constant surveillance and monitoring,
allowing society and the state to have more control over them. The two boys in
the film strongly challenge this collective ideology on one level but in terms
of narrative outcomes it arguably is reinforced with Arbor hiding under his bed
and refusing to come out until the Swifty’s Mum (Swifty has just been fatally
electrocuted while with Arbor stealing cable) appears in a scene that suggests
emotional understanding and forgiveness.
In Fish
Tank, representations of youth are similar. The more middle class Connor
exploits Mia sexually and she is seen in a victim role, despite her manifest
aggressive behavior in a similar way that Arbor and Swifty are exploited by
Kitten. Her family, like Arbor and Connor’s is also dysfunctional and the film takes a ‘Broken Britain’ approach to
representations of family and social class. Mia is an interesting character in
that her youthful vulnerability is evident and is given over to audiences as
equally as her anti-social behavior – this references Martin Barker’s ideas of
how moral panics of deviant youth culture are often challenged through good and
bad deeds. Mia’s positive feelings for her sister are apparent and her symbolic
desire to free a horse she thinks will be killed by Billy and his brothers is
admirable (the role of horses is also important in The Selfish Giant). Andrea Arnold positions audiences however into decoding intelligent, sympathetic
readings of poverty, neglect, abuse and notions of the difficulties faced by
single parent families on a low income and the idea of consequences. Through
the mise-en-scene the film
represents all of the youth chav stereotype signifiers but arguably suggests a
more pluralistic representation.
Mia could be seen as ‘belonging’ to a
collective group of dysfunctional, urban teenagers with no value in society,
economically or socially. The representation of this collective group is frequently
alluded to in the right wing press, e.g. during and after the London riots and
similar images are circulated and reinforced, often deliberately placed in binary opposition to more ‘normal’
mainstream culture. Levi Strauss’ framework is useful in understanding this
with middle aged, more respectable representations seen as the dominant culture
in teen dramas such as Waterloo Road
and mainstream soap operas like Eastenders.
Like Jimmy in Quadrophenia however, Mia
manages to break of out this spiral (hence the title ‘Fish Tank’) and is
empowered to escape from her life when narrative resolution sees Mia driving
away with her boyfriend to a new, albeit uncertain life in Wales. Tyler, her
younger sister waves her farewell uttering the immortal line, “Say hello to the
whales for me”. Tyler is also wayward in that she drinks, smokes, swears but
has more of an emotional, dependent loyalty to her mother and ironically is
seen in some scenes ‘telling Mia off’ for not attending meetings with the local
Education Authority about getting her back into school. Youth culture in Fish Tank on one level is seen as
empowering despite the fact that Mia’s childhood ‘innocence’ has been destroyed
by her upbringing as she challenges societal norms, escapes from a recognised
collective identity and builds her own future.
The representation of age is also subject
to biological and social constructions. Youth culture is mediated through media
representations to an audience who read potential encoded meaning. The
television teen drama Waterloo Road
is an interesting text that explores this concept as it main narrative function
– the main characters in the drama are school children and teachers, often
teachers ‘saving’ and looking after their charges with parents rarely seen
throughout the nine series. A latent
meaning from Waterloo Road, and on
occasional manifest is how the programme takes a critical approach to
parenting, often blaming parents within the narrative for the anti-social
behavior of the children. Originally set in Rochdale (Greater Manchester) it
again, like many other British media representations of youth makes clear
correlations with deviant, anti-social behavior linking with working class
culture. The programme moved from a dysfunctional school in Rochdale to an
independent academy in Greenock, Scotland for the eighth series but for the
ninth series currently airing (as of February 2014) the school has lost its
benefactor and has returned to a comprehensive status.
Waterloo
Road concerns itself with negative and positive
representations of youth culture with an emphasis on the negative. David
Buckingham, in Youth, Identity and
Digital Media explores the idea of deviance and delinquency as a social
problem which legitimises various forms of treatments e.g. the work of social,
educational and clinical agencies that seek to rehabilitate troublesome youth.
‘Problems’ are omnipresent in the drama, normalising the traumatic world of the
teenager by way of hegemonic representations suggesting even that narrative
events are a form of rites of passage. While good drama is not always born from
‘normal’, non-dramatic representations Waterloo
Road perpetuates the idea of ‘youth as trouble’ and successfully
marginalises working class youth culture into a collective identity.
Misfits
is a more pluralistic representation of youth which
both challenges and reinforced notions of collective identity. It is a science
fiction comedy drama broadcast on E4 between 2009 and 2013 about a group of
young offenders sentenced to work in a community programme service where they
obtain supernatural powers. On one level, the comedy presents audiences with
the familiar idea of ASBO teens (audience identification) but represents them
in a likeable way. By giving them superpowers it directly contradicts the
negative stereotype, offering audiences a point of view from the protagonists
themselves. As with parents in Waterloo
Road adult roles are represented negatively with characters like probation
officers being represented as monsters – this leads audiences onto a latent
preferred meaning that what is in fact monstrous is the negative
representations of youth in society and the whole idea of stereotyping. Again
linked in with working class culture, the programme is a genuine site of
struggle exploring societal hegemonic constructs through humour. As with any
text however, the audience is crucial and as with all E4 programing, the
positive representation of youth culture may be explained by the niche 15-35
target audience.
Film and television, despite social
networking and viral interactivity
are still one-way narratives that either challenge, reinforce (or sometimes
both) stereotypical representations of youth, reflecting a collective identity.
Perhaps looking at digital technology and developing further the role of the
prosumer further is a way of analysing the changing representation of youth
culture in society with young people constantly exploiting new commercial
opportunities with the media offering a form of liberal pluralism, but within a
hegemonic framework.
Overall awarding and explanation
42/50 = A Grade
·
Well
contextualised with an awareness of past, present and a future with potentially
the opportunity to develop notions of collective identity and the
representation of youth in the future a little further.
·
Strong
theoretical framework correctly applied to text, underpinning own analysis –
use of quotation would have ensured a deeper academic structure.
·
Intelligent
analytical framework that explores case study texts (and referencing others for
balance) with focused reference to the topic.
·
Evidence
of one area of representation, applied to two media with perhaps too much of a
focus on film and not enough on the second media, television.
·
Well
written, balanced with evidence of argument and debate.
Broken Down,
Exemplar C-B Grade Response
Analyse the impact of media representation on the collective
identity of one or more groups of people.
You have one hour only to answer this question so the essay needs
to be well planned and structured – I suggest that you detail sub headings for
the essay and then bullet point the main areas underneath those headings that
are to be covered. It is also good practice when preparing for the exam to
write in full prose an example introduction and conclusion.
Stare at the question until you are happy with the area of study
it wants you to explore and then respond in the first paragraph by showing the
examiner you know what collective media identity is as a concept – follow this
by linking in some early theory and introduce your topic, youth collective
identity:
·
Collective identity implies a homogenous group (each with common interests and a
similar lifestyle). Representations in the media can reflect this.
·
Representation is the way in
which the media mediate, repackage or ‘re-present’ individuals, people,
places and social groups to audiences.
·
Theorists like Richard Dyer argue
there are political and social reasons for maintaining a hegemonic collective identity (traditional
representations that are reinforced as common sense) in perpetuating social
divisions, maintaining the dominant culture and legitimising inequality.
·
This is turn can underpinned by moral panics – wayward youth culture was seen to
blame for the 2011 London riots and applying Stanley Cohen’s appropriation from
Wilkins – 1964 of the concept deviancy amplification, youth was demonised in tabloid,
mid market tabloid and television news coverage.
Now you need to begin to link collective identity more directly to
youth culture (your topic) remembering there must be reference to a ‘past,
present and future’ referencing two media. This is the time to also impress the
examiner with the fact that you can illustrate your points with a range of
examples and the beginnings of ability to apply theory to your case studies:
·
Cultural stereotypes and moral
panics still remain however but arguably are as less obvious than before e.g.
passive computer game culture, obesity, young female drinkers and smokers,
unemployment and general social deviance.
·
Quadrophenia:
Stanley Cohen described the event the film is based on as a moral panic that
was used to show how youth had become ‘out of control’ but in the film it could
be argued elements of these sub cultures are represented as glamourous andaspirational (you can explore this historical text in a little
more depth but focus primarily on the present).
·
The struggle of youth for
acceptability changes over time in as much as the negative representations of
age and social class in 1979 is seen differently in more contemporary urban
film dramas like Kidulthood, Shifty and Ill Manors and my case studies – The Selfish Giant (2013) and Fish Tank (2009).
·
Using Stuart Hall’s theory of
dominant, oppositional of negotiated readings however, the impact of a
representation on a collective identity depends on the audience(answering the question directly).
Start to develop your first case study: The Selfish Giant (film).
If you can, it will help you to get more marks if you frame the introduction to
your first case study with some theory. Have 5 key points ready you want to say
about the film in how it challenges or reinforces a collective identity (this
can be about similarity and difference, past and present):
·
In Sub Culture: The Meaning of
Style, Dick Hebdige suggests the idea that youth sub culture
maintains divisions in society identifying two stereotypes – youth as fun and
youth as trouble (well done – relevant theory in straight away).
·
In The Selfish Giant,
an independent social realist film
distributed in 2013 the latter ‘trouble’ stereotype is explored – it portrays
the dysfunctional lives of two young boys, Arbor and Swifty who steal copper
cable for Kitten, the unscrupulous boss of a scrap yard in Bradford, west
Yorkshire.
·
The film compares well with Fish Tank as two films from the same genre
focusing on the representation of youth and regional identity but also on
social class.
·
The Selfish Giant explores
the innocence of childhood, myths surrounding this construct and the idea of
consequences. Both boys attend school but Arbor is permanently excluded and
both have as priorities making money, long before they would be stereotypically
seen as legitimately on the job market. Arbor actually gives some of the money
he makes to his family in a reversal of parental expectations.
·
The film stops short of
developing a macro narrative on
the problems faced across the UK in impoverished areas where young boys will
risk their lives stealing cable from railway tracks and other hazardous areas
like behind power stations. At the same time youth is represented as arrogant,
selfish, aggressive, deviant and criminal but Arbor and Swifty are also framed
as kind, emotive and vulnerable with the key criminal in the film the adult
owner of the scrap yard who exploits them. Skins on
occasion, offers similar narratives (you will be developing your television case studies later).
·
In The Selfish Giant Acland’s ‘ideology of protection’
can be studied with Arbor and Swifty promoting the collective notion that young
people are in need of constant surveillance and monitoring, allowing society
and the state to have more control over them. The two boys in the film strongly
challenge this collective identity.
You mentioned Fish
Tank earlier, now would be a
good place in the essay to compare the representations to give balance and
create a discussion, or argument to support your points:
·
In Fish Tank,
representations of youth are similar. Mia’s family, like Arbor and Connor’s is
also dysfunctional and the film takes a ‘Broken Britain’
approach to representations of family and social class (see Daily Mail moral panics).
·
Mia is an interesting character
in that her youthful vulnerability is evident and is given over to audiences as
equally as her anti social behavior – this references Martin Barker’s ideas of
how moral panics of deviant youth culture are often challenged through good and
bad deeds.
·
Andrea Arnold positions audiences however into decoding intelligent,
sympathetic readings of poverty, neglect, abuse and notions of the difficulties
faced by single parent families on a low income and the idea of consequences.
·
Through the mise-en-scene the film represents all of the youth
chav stereotype signifiers but arguably suggests a more pluralistic
representation.
·
Mia could be seen as ‘belonging’
to a collective group of dysfunctional, urban teenagers with no value in
society, economically or socially. The representation of this collective group
is frequently alluded to in the right wing press (e.g. the Daily Mail), e.g.
during and after the London riots and similar images are circulated and
reinforced, often deliberately placed in binary opposition to
more ‘normal’ mainstream culture.
It’s now time to explore the impact of representation on youth
collective identity in your second media – television. Remember, as before to
reference a range of examples in your introduction:
·
Teen dramas such as Skins (E4, 2007 – 2013) and Misfits (E4 2009 – 2013) offer a hegemonic,
but also pluralistic (diverse, different) representation.
·
Levi Strauss’ framework is useful
in understanding this with middle aged, more respectable representations seen
as the dominant culture in teen dramas such asWaterloo Road and mainstream soap operas like Eastenders.
Explore in as much depth as possible your first television case
study – Waterloo Road:
·
The main characters in Waterloo Road are school children and teachers,
often teachers ‘saving’ and looking after their charges with parents rarely seen
throughout the nine series. A latent (deeper/hidden)
meaning from Waterloo Road, and on occasional manifest (obvious)
is how the programme takes a critical approach to parenting.
·
Waterloo Road concerns
itself with negative and positive representations of youth culture with an
emphasis on the negative. David Buckingham, in Youth, Identity and Digital
Media explores the
idea of deviance and delinquency as a social problem that legitimises various
forms of treatments e.g. the work of social, educational and clinical agencies
that seek to rehabilitate troublesome youth – this can be seen in Waterloo Road.
·
‘Problems’ are the main feature
the drama, normalising the traumatic world of the teenager by way of hegemonic
representations. While good drama is not always born from ‘normal’, non
dramatic representations Waterloo Road perpetuates
the idea of ‘youth as trouble’ and successfully marginalises working class
youth culture into a collective identity.
Compare your case study of Waterloo
Road to a second text – with
film you argued thatThe Selfish Giant and Fish Tank were similar in terms iof
representation but here you could create an argument to suggest that Misfits
suggests a more pluralistic (diverse) representation which impacts more
‘positively’ on youth collective identity:
·
Misfits is a more
pluralistic representation of youth which both challenges and reinforced
notions of collective identity. It is a science fiction comedy drama broadcast
on E4 between 2009 and 2013 about a group of young offenders sentenced to work
in a community programme service where they obtain supernatural powers.
·
On one level, the comedy presents
audiences with the familiar idea of ASBO teens (audience identification) but
represents them in a likeable way. By giving them superpowers it directly
contradicts the negative stereotype, offering audiences a point of view from
the protagonists themselves.
·
As with parents in Waterloo Road adult roles are represented negatively
with characters like probation officers represented as monsters – this leads
audiences onto a preferred (dominant) meaning that what is in fact monstrous is
the negative representations of youth in society and the whole idea of
stereotyping.
·
Again linked in with working
class culture, the programme explores hegemonic constructs through humour. As
with any text however, the audience is crucial and as with all E4 programing,
the positive representation of youth culture may be explained by the niche
15-35 target audience.
Summarise your arguments and conclude your essay by direct linking
with the essay title – in an exam based situation where you may be running out
of time, it is better to finish your analysis and only if time permits, develop
a conclusion. The conclusion however, is an opportunity to anticipate representation
of youth in the future to evidence OCR’s requirement of a ‘past, present a
future’. It is also a place where you can reference the role of technology (OCR
like this) and also frame again the essay with a last theoretical reference:
·
Film and television, despite
social networking and viral interactivity are
still one-way narratives that either challenge, reinforce (or sometimes both)
stereotypical representations of youth, reflecting a collective identity.
·
The texts I have examined reflect
changes in the film genre of social realism in regards to the way youth is
represented but still following a genre template in terms of audience
expectations and codes and conventions. Television arguably (dependent on
channel) has more flexibility in terms of challenging notions of the collective
group although ironically many 16-19 year olds do not watch television in
traditional platform format any more – choosing instead to stream using
broadband technology
·
Perhaps looking at digital
technology and developing further the role of the prosumer and identified by
David Gauntlett is a way of analysing the changing representation of youth
culture in society with young people constantly exploiting new commercial
opportunities with the media offering a form of liberal pluralism, but within a
hegemonic framework (things are changing slowly). Young people will become
increasingly more empowered, economically, socially and culturally as a result
of digital technology.
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