Hall argues that the
media appear to reflect reality whilst in fact they construct it. He also
addressed theoretically the issue of how people make sense of media texts.
In a
key paper, 'Encoding/Decoding', Stuart Hall (1980), argued that the dominant
ideology is typically inscribed as the 'preferred reading' in a media text, but
that this is not automatically adopted by readers.
The social situations of
readers/viewers/listeners may lead them to adopt different stances. 'Dominant'
readings are produced by those whose social situation favours the preferred
reading; 'negotiated' readings are produced by those who inflect the preferred
reading to take account of their social position; and 'oppositional' readings
are produced by those whose social position puts them into direct conflict with
the preferred reading Hall insists that there remain limits to interpretation:
meaning cannot be simply 'private' and 'individual'.
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