Friday, December 12, 2008
Hebdidge
Baudrillard
Habermas
One of the most interesting point in Habermas’s theory is when he talks about how consumerism has taken the place of democracy, and therefore choice. This is interesting because most would assume that consumerism yield a lot of choice, however he argues that the idea of choice that consumerism offers, isn’t really choice at all, but more a cloud of smoke. The choice between different types of toothpaste isn’t a real choice, because you’ve already gotten to the point of choosing between products. He says that the real choice comes in the form of whether or not one participates in consumerism, and that that choice is a product from how democracy has changed.
Macherey
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Jameson and the "Impulse of Capitalism'
Hobby
Tuesday, December 2nd class
Our discussion from Tuesday sparked my interest and really had me thinking for the rest of the week and weekend. Jameson’s interest in the "impulse in capitalism" is significant to today's society and media. Our society and media really emphasize this impulse in order to continue the conventional wisdom of the American Dream that is orchestrated through all media outlets in American society. People consume, consume, and continue to consume in order to continue this conventional wisdom and to keep up in this materialism crazed society. In particular, we discussed in class advertising and the role it has on consumers. The example posed in class was
Jameson and Nostalgia
Thursday, December 4, 2008
The Plague is 9/11
In the beginning of his article, he describes the plague that hit a nineteenth century town. All the people were to stay inside their homes, fearing death if they disobeyed. Everything that happened during this plague hold up was recorded by officials who would come by the houses daily to see if anyone had died, was deathly ill, or was still healthy. This event gave the officials the right to take over the power of the people. Foucault says that the plague is a type of dream for those who are in power because it gives them free reign to govern over the people how ever they please.
I related this to a modern day event, 9/11. I feel as thought the terrorists represent the plague. They was led into our country unknowingly. After that day occurred, we were scared, didn't want to travel or leave home. The Bush administration told us that we were at a code red and that everyone should look out for people who looked like "the terrorists". The people of America did not think twice when Bush told us that we were going to war to fight the terrorists. He had total control. He dreamed of this situation. Any thought?
"Wow, weather is so exciting!"...
Anyway, as I was watching the anchors, they kept being extremely concerned and saying the same information over and over. I asked why they were staying on the air for so long and someone told me that it was policy. I personally think that the news company thought they would get more ratings by making a small weather warning look like a catastrophe. Because this event only happens a couple times a year, they knew that they would get some excitement into the program by following the tornado minute by minute. I guess this way is more exciting, but the anchors should try to change it up, not always follow the old journalistic ways that have worked throughout the past.
Scripting Reality
In class we also discussed how the news is scripted, and how there are only a few story types we are presented with. We discussed how the weather became scripted by the Weather Channel. I started to make connections to my prior class, social psychology, where we thought about how real life is often scripted. When we think of a first date, we think of the awkward picking up of the girl at her parent's house, the romantic comedy movie, the dinner at Olive Garden, and the terrifying kiss good night. Real life, through constant media reinforcement, becomes scripted. When consumerism is written into the script, that's where the bureaucracy wins.
Boudieu - On Television
Television is totally structured in ways which it always has been. It is mainly for our viewing pleasure, yet sometimes has programs which inspire us to do ore with our lives. Journalists have the control to make us think in certain ways. If you are watching the nightly news and Katie Couric tells you that we should all put our money into Mac Computers because PC's are going down the toilet, I'll bet you at least half of her audience will do so.
Audience rating are a big part of television programming. If a TV show has a horrible rating, it will be off the air within 2 weeks. How do the people behind the ideas of these shows know what is going to make it and what idea is not? Well, when one has a news program, the most important thing is to have people know about it. It is important to use all different types of media (newspapers, internet, etc) to publicize the new show. This article reveals the truths about how television is extremely political.
Butler - Gender Trouble
In Judith Butler's article, she grapples with the idea that women have been wrongly looked at for years. When we are born, we are told by are parents and the media how we should act, either as little girls or little boys. If you're a boy, you are told that you should go play with trucks and tools. If you are a girl, you should like pink, play with princess dolls and have an unhealthy infatuation with Barbie. But why are we placed into these two categories, and what if the way you are does not fit under the name category which you have been given.
Butler believes that women have been oppressed due to a universal patriarchy run by men. To an extent, I do believe her. When I look at McDonalds kids meals, the toys are different for girls and boys. For a boy, the ad is usually in blue, green, or red and shows a "tough guy" modeling with the specific toy. Usually it is a transformer doll or something. For the girls, it's usually Barbie or something like that. One time I saw that instead of toys they were giving out games. The girls game was a "Bratz" game. On each game space the girls would be told, "Looks like you have to come up with a new hair style!", or "Meet Brandie at the mall at 6:00!". When I looked at the boys game it was a scientific search! This is a prime example of what Butler addresses throughout her article.
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Class Response on Jameson
Judith Butler from 'Gender Trouble'
We are separated often by race,class, ethnicity, and gender. The political assumption is that there must be a universal basis for Feminism according to Butler. Feminism is associated with the notion of oppression and even masculine domination. Butler explains how the claims of a patriarchal society are no longer as credible as they once were, and how feminism is misunderstood.
In my opinion the term women, is troublesome. It is troublesome in the sense that women are still separate from men in terms of what they have the ability to accomplish. I am not a feminist, I feel if I were I would understand more of what Butler is trying to accomplish with her piece.
"The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a field of power regularly buried through the assertion of the foundation."
In my opinion she is trying to say that the feminist's identity ashould not control their identity as representing themselves.
SW...Mostly Parody
“During the class discussion on Jameson, we discussed schizophrenia as “the breakdown of the signifying chain.” By this, I think he meant that “schizophrenia” arises when there is a break down between Signifiers and the Signified.”
For some reason this made me think of binary oppositions and Derrida’s idea of deconstruction. How we can’t get around the absence and the presence. By just switching it to absence/presence doesn’t mean anything. It doesn’t get around the trace that it already is. It is not meant to destroy the binary opposition, to make them equal, simply to understand what it is a trace of. To become aware of these constructed ideals.
Isn’t parody intertext in many ways? I mean if parody means to mock something, one must have an idea of the piece being mocked in order to fully understand it correct? Again I will bring up Lisa’s ever so present example of family guy. This show mocks many things—possibly my favorite, is Starwars—and in these parodies there is obviously intertext at work. This sense of a trace as well. What might happen is one day, someone will parody Family Guy, and eventually the idea that Starwars was ever an “original” could be lost in trace. Kinda like how through language we lose meaning (anyone remember the “flesh eating dwelling that reproduces?).
Are all parodies intertexulized? Is all funny intertext parody?
--Scarlett Wishes
Jameson
Ignoring the problem
Butler "Gender Trouble"
Parody-Post Class
Parody "On Television"?
Bourdieu suggests the mindless programming be replaced with captivating, questioning, offending works. Are there such works on television today? To coincide with the week’s other reading by Jameson, I think that thoughtful programming does exist, however, it is in a sort of parody form of the other shows. For example, Comedy Central distributes a number of politically questioning programming, like The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, Chocolate News, and even South Park. These shows make political statements and present unnerving scenarios. They often offend greatly, but some how receive audience approval as well. Through comedy, and the “laughter effect,” people can be stimulated by opinionated programming. If its all fun and games, how can it seriously offend? Perhaps the easily offended people do not watch these shows, or misunderstand the content’s paradoxical sense (as often is the case with the extreme right wing and The Colbert Report). Yet, perhaps even, it is because of their large differences with the “ordinary” shows, they have become a cultural phenomenon. Now the question becomes will this type of parody programming become the norm, and if so, will it then become the ordinary for Bourdieu as well?
Jameson- Post Class
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Jameson Post Class
There are many films and some television shows that have been made in the past and/or present that represent a certain time period. These are meant to give the viewer a certain idea of what that time period was like to live in. Immediately I thought of the television show “That 70’s Show.” As stated in the title, this comedy portrayed the ways that those who were growing up in that time acted like and the things that they did.
We talked about this show in class one day as an example of representation of the old in the current day, and how its representation was a way for those of us who didn’t live in that time period to experience what it was like (according to the creators). When watching this show there are certainly situations between the group of friends and between the families that I can relate to. This is what makes the show so funny. A comedian Dane Cook said in one of his older skits that the things he says are funny because they are true. I completely agree with this. A lot of the times that I am laughing at this show it is because I can relate to what’s going on. This show holds a great nostalgia because its permission to relate to and laugh at its situations makes you feel like you could have been a part of this time period.
Post-class Dec. 2
In class, the Victoria’s Secret fashion show was brought up as an example of a pastiche of the human body. Unlike the vestiges from Ancient Greece celebrating the beauty of humanity, the Victoria’s Secret extravaganza exploits the body in order to make a profit and sell lingerie. Although I understand how Jameson can find recreations like this “empty” in the sense that they do not place a value upon thought, creation, and representation like many classic remnants of artworks do, I think these representations are valuable in a different mindset as well. They denounce what Jameson describes as the current dominate form of culture- that which is postmodern. Culture and art in Jameson’s postmodern sense idealizes the virtues of capitalism. The works are made for the purpose of profit, no longer expression. This is not to say this form of art and culture is less worthy of production than the intellectual works, but it does show the shift of values of the culture of our time. Although the works are pastiche and lack, as Jameson suggests, historical and political impact in the intellectual sense, they are meaningful in the capitalist society and thus are a huge part of our current culture.
Monday, December 1, 2008
"It's Just Made for Television"
"Its just made for television" caught my attention. I interpreted Bourdieu’s statement as means to validate the variety of topics that are seen on TV. Recently, TV has become more sexualized and orientated towards drugs and alcohols. These themes are frequently found in almost every television show aired. I interpreted Bourdieu's quote as the justification for the inappropriate content found on TV. I think this statement can be used to justify the exorbitant amounts of sex and drug use that is often incorporated in any successful show aired. Sex and drugs are two themes which do capture viewer’s attentions and make these shows successful. These topics are appealing to many and make the television shows interesting. It's nearly impossible to watch a TV show that doesn't have sex and drug use or a reference to either of the two. TV impacts so many people and has the power to reach so many audiences so people on all levels are being influenced by the content found in television shows. In addition, I think the quote “ The evening news on French TV beings together more people than all the French newspapers together, morning and evening editions included. . . When the information supplied by a single news medium becomes a universal source of news, the resulting political and cultural effects are clear” ( 328). With this being true, so many French citizens are connected through this powerful communication outlet. This is fascinating because it really validates how TV affects people and can have an impact on what they see and hear about reality and worldly news. American TV has been known to falsify reality and alter the news. Since this outlet is so powerful and influential it’s hard for people to differentiate what’s been altered and what hasn’t. Therefore, maybe we aren’t getting the correct information and news but it’s playing a role in how we view the world and the rest of media.
bourdieu
Kelsey Pike. Bourdieu.
Bourdeu and Tv
stories are always different. Collectively, individuals are able to come together, yet remain in their own homes, and watch the same program. It has all real stories and real situations that we as viewers are first exposed to by them. Bourdeu calls this “homoginization.” Whereas newspapers are read at different times, and often show many different points of views for readers. Television news is something that always remains constant, thus making it one of our most effective forms of media.
Bourdeu and Tv
stories are always different. Collectively, individuals are able to come together, yet remain in their own homes, and watch the same program. It has all real stories and real situations that we as viewers are first exposed to by them. Bourdeu calls this “homoginization.” Whereas newspapers are read at different times, and often show many different points of views for readers. Television news is something that always remains constant, thus making it one of our most effective forms of media.
Marx: Ruling Ideas
"...the class which is the ruling material force of society is at the same time its ruling intellectual force."
This quote is a major theme in our ideologies that we live by. People who have the means to produce products make the hegemonic ideas of our society. These products are not only material products, they are also the ideas of the ruling class. For example, if a big corporation puts out a beauty product that supposedly takes back time by removing wrinkles, the lower classes believe that wrinkles must be bad and that they should go out and buy the product. This implements the ideas of the ruling class to those who are not in the ruling class.
Those who are in the ruling class wants those who are not to believe that these ideas are true. In most cases it works, but slowly and surly I believe many are becoming aware of the truths behind these ideas. These hegemonic thoughts are put into play so that those in the ruling class can stay there and make a profit off of the lower classes. They disguise their thoughts through the media and celebrities. They use people to sell their products who either look 'just like us' or choose people who are too perfect which keeps those who are 'normal' always striving for something better.
Constantly Being Disciplined
This quote sums up the main idea of Foucault's article. As we walk through our daily lives it is sometimes hard to believe that we are constantly being watched. Even as I walk around campus, I don't see any cameras, but I know they are there. Not only do we have cameras on this campus, but there are also campus security and RA's walking through the dormitories to make sure no one needs to be disciplined.
In class, we talked about a new social code that will be implemented sometime next year. It will tell students to watch out for one another and to let someone in authority know if someone is acting in a 'bad' way. The quote above explains how even though we are not always watched, we still act as though we are. Kelsey gave a great example of the mirrors that are in Walgreens. We can't see to the other side, but because they are there, we would think twice before doing something like stealing.
In the show Gossip Girl, the main characters are always under surveillance because everyone has the power to capture the moment with their cell phone cameras. These days, everyone has the power. No longer is it a couple of people at the top, it includes everyone with the technology at their finger tips.