Chapter 8. Media and Technology

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46 Terms

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Technology

describes the application of science to address the problems of daily life - all encompassing of tools such as calculators to cell phones

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Technological stratification

technology access often creates changes that lead to ever greater inequalities

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There are two forms of technological stratification

Differential class and knowledge gap

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Differential class

based access to technology in the form of the digital divide

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Knowledge gap

an ongoing and increasing gap in information for those who have less access to technology

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e-readiness

the ability to sort through, interpret, and process knowledge

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Planned obsolescence

business practice of planning for a product to be obsolete or unusable from the time it is created - Ex. women’s stockings

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Embodied energy

calculation of all the energy costs required for the resource extraction, manufacturing, transportation, marketing, and disposal of a product

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Media

refers to all print, digital, and electronic means of communication

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Without technology

media would not exist

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Patents - three types of innovation

Utility patent, Design patent, Plant patents

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Utility patent

Invention or discovery of any new and useful process, product, or machine, or for a significant improvement to existing technologies

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Design patent

Architecture and industrial design, this means someone has invented a new and original design for a manufactured product

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Plant patents

recognize the discovery of new plant types that can be asexually reproduced

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Schmeiser

found Monsanto’s genetically modified “Roundup Ready” canola growing on his farm - he saved the seed and grew his own crop, but Monsanto tried to charge him licensing fees because of their patent

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Anderson and Tushman

suggest an evolutionary model of technological change, in which a breakthrough in one form of technology leads to a number of variations

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Print media

early forms found in ancient Rome - hand-copied onto boards and carried around to keep the citizenry informed - now reduced significantly

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Invention of the printing press

the way people people shared ideas changed - information could be mass produced and stored

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Telegraph

mid-1800s - information could be transmitted in minutes

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Television

mid-20th century - newspaper circulation steadily dropped off - more people turn to internet news sites and other forms of new media to stay informed

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Digital media overtaken print media

Since it is less costly than print

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Radio

first “live” mass medium - information and enjoyment can be at home or on the go

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Quality programming and a global perspective

PBS (Public Broadcasting Service) in the United States, the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation), and CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation)

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Film industry

1930s, when colour and sound were first integrated into feature films - early films were unifying for society - Hollywood and Bollywood are still very active

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New media

encompasses all interactive forms of information exchange - including social networking sites, blogs, podcasts, wikis, and virtual worlds

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Popular video game and movie titles geared toward children and teens

shows the vast spectrum of violence that is displayed, condoned, and acted out

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Anderson and Bushman

Reviewed 40-plus years of research on the subject - links violent video game use and aggression - children who had just played a violent video game demonstrated an immediate increase in hostile or aggressive thoughts, emotions, and physiological arousal

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Advertising

technology and media have allowed consumers to bypass traditional advertising venues

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Thomas Friedman

landmark study, identified several ways in which technology “flattened” the globe and contributed to our global economy - claims core economic concepts were changed by personal computing and high-speed internet

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Media globalization

the worldwide integration of media through the cross-cultural exchange of ideas

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Technological globalization

refers to the cross-cultural development and exchange of technology

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Lyons

suggests that multinational corporations are the primary vehicle of media globalization - corporations control global mass-media content and distribution

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Mass media control and ownership

Bell, Telus, and Rogers control over 80% of the wireless and internet service provider market

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Critical sociology

political ideology and cultural colonialism occurs with technological growth

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Functionalist

might focus on how technology creates new ways to share information about successful crop-growing programs, or on the economic benefits of opening a new market for cell phone use

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Interpretive sociologists

global exchange of views creates the possibility of mutual understanding and consensus

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Feminist perspective theorists

believe it is crucial in creating and reinforcing gender stereotypes

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Cyberfeminism

New media and feminism - application and promotion of feminism online

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China’s authoritarian government

blocks the use of certain terms, such as “human rights” and passes new laws that require people to register with their real names, making it more dangerous to criticize government actions

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Technological globalization

impacted in large part by technological diffusion - spread of technology across borders

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Africa’s poorest countries

lack of infrastructure and no access to telephones - a shared phone program created by the Grameen Foundation is put in place so people would have access to a “village phone”

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Gatekeeping

the sorting process by which thousands of possible messages are shaped into a mass media–appropriate form and reduced to a manageable amount - defined by Shoemaker and Voss

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Panoptic surveillance

envisioned by Jeremy Bentham and later analyzed by Michel Foucault - increasingly realized in the form of technology used to monitor our every move

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Neo-Luddites

people who see technology as symbolizing the coldness and alienation of modern life

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Technophiles

technology symbolizes the potential for a brighter future

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Technological middle ground

technology might symbolize status or failure (owning expensive technology vs basic technology)