Meaning in the Media: Discourse, Controversy and Debate

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2010-04-12
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

Meaning in the Media addresses the issue of how we should respond to competing claims about meaning put forward in confrontations between people or organisations in highly charged circumstances such as bitter public controversies and expensive legal disputes. Alan Durant draws attention to the pervasiveness and significance of such meaning-related disputes in the media, investigating how their 'meaning' dimension is best described and explained. Through his analysis of deception, distortion, bias, false advertising, offensiveness and other kinds of communicative behaviour that trigger interpretive disputes, Durant shows that we can understand both meaning and media better if we focus in new ways on moments in discourse when the apparently continuous flow of understanding and agreement breaks down. This lively and contemporary volume will be invaluable to students and teachers of linguistics, media studies, journalism and law.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsp. xi
Introductionp. 1
Meaning troublespotsp. 2
Approaches to meaningp. 5
Historical context for a media dispute culturep. 11
Outline of main argumentsp. 13
Why meanings matterp. 14
Communication failure and interpretive conflictp. 17
From personal disagreement to meaning troublespotp. 19
Introductionp. 19
Interpretive disagreementp. 19
Informal disagreement and more public 'media' disputesp. 21
Communication and the nature of disagreementp. 25
The concept of 'meaning troublespots'p. 26
Types of interpretive disputep. 29
The problem of interpretive gridlockp. 30
Summaryp. 32
Signs of troublep. 33
Introductionp. 33
Three kinds of troublep. 33
Interaction between communication categoriesp. 41
Usefulness of communicative distinctionsp. 43
Communication and social harmp. 45
Summaryp. 46
Different kinds of meaning questionp. 48
Introductionp. 48
Limits of interpretationp. 48
Meaning not a single questionp. 50
Conflicting attitudes towards questions of meaningp. 63
Summaryp. 64
Making sense of 'meaning'p. 65
Meaning and the appeal to semanticsp. 67
Introductionp. 67
Meaning not an 'open and shut' casep. 67
Meaning wonderlandp. 69
Meanings of meaningp. 72
Problems with applying semantics in interpretive disputesp. 78
Summaryp. 79
Interpretive variationp. 81
Introductionp. 81
Should a hundred meanings blossom?p. 81
Code and inferencep. 84
Creativity and riskp. 87
Boundaries of legitimate inferencep. 89
Public circulation of meaningp. 93
Summaryp. 94
Time-based meaningp. 95
Introductionp. 95
Meaning in the mindp. 95
When does a meaning become a meaning?p. 96
Closure and continuing dialoguep. 99
Meaning approximationp. 101
Given time and attentionp. 103
This will mean more laterp. 107
Summaryp. 108
Verbal disputes and approaches to resolving themp. 111
Meaning as a knockout competitionp. 113
Introductionp. 113
Fighting over meaningp. 113
Argument culturep. 115
Need for counselling in a meaning trianglep. 116
Conflict and cooperationp. 120
Caught up in the actp. 122
Clever footwork between meaningsp. 126
Summaryp. 127
Standards of interpretationp. 128
Introductionp. 128
Adjudicating meanings is different from interpretingp. 128
Sources of interpretive authorityp. 129
What creates a 'standard'?p. 131
Conceptual and procedural standardsp. 133
Interpretive standards and legal outcomesp. 142
Summaryp. 144
Analysing disputes in different fields of law and regulationp. 145
Defamation: 'reasonably capable of bearing the meaning attributed'p. 147
Introductionp. 147
Libel and the meaning of wordsp. 147
Defamatory potential: an illustrationp. 151
Ordinary and extended meaningp. 162
Capable of bearing the meaning attributedp. 168
Defamatory meaning and common knowledgep. 171
Summaryp. 173
Advertising: 'not only what is said, but what is reasonably implied'p. 174
Introductionp. 174
Commercial information and persuasionp. 174
Advertising and promotional discoursep. 176
How discourse represents products and servicesp. 177
Advertising law and regulationp. 179
Product and service claimsp. 180
Beyond product and service claimsp. 191
Deciding what an advert is telling youp. 192
The average consumerp. 195
Generalised interpretive strategiesp. 196
Summaryp. 198
Offensiveness: 'If there is a meaning, it is doubtless objectionable'p. 199
Introductionp. 199
Meaning and boundaries of acceptabilityp. 199
Cause for complaintp. 201
Meaning in actionp. 213
Interpretive variation and standardsp. 219
Symbolic shock effectsp. 222
Summaryp. 223
Conclusionp. 225
Trust in interpretationp. 227
Introductionp. 227
Meaning and speculationp. 227
Risky informationp. 231
Trust and suspicionp. 235
Pragmatic interpretationp. 237
Summaryp. 239
Referencesp. 240
Indexp. 250
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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