Pertti Alasuutari provides a state-of-the-art summary of the field of audience research. With contributions from Ann Gray, Joke Hermes, John Tulloch and David Morley, a case is presented for a new agenda to account for the role of the media in everyday life.
Spis treści
PART ONE: THE SHAPE OF AUDIENCE RESEARCH
Introduction – Pertti Alasuutari
Three Phases of Reception Studies
Audience and Reception Research in Retrospect – Ann Gray
The Trouble with Audiences
The Best of both Worlds? Media Audience Research between Rival Paradigms – Kim Schr[sl]oder
PART TWO: THE NEW AGENDA: THE INSCRIPTION OF AUDIENCES
Media Figures in Identity Construction – Joke Hermes
Cultural Images of the Media – Pertti Alasuutari
Legitimations of Television Programme Policies – Heikki Hellman
Patterns of Argumentation and Discursive Convergencies in a Multichannel Age
Slaves of the Ratings Tyranny? Media Images of the Audience – Ingunn Hagen
The Implied Audience in Soap Opera Production – John Tulloch
Everyday Rhetorical Strategies among Television Professionals
To Be an Audience – Birgitta H[um]oijer
`To Boldly Go…′ – David Morley
The `Third Generation′ of Reception Studies
O autorze
Pertti Alasuutari is a sociologist, cultural studies scholar, paterfamilias and a highly significant figure in the development of both Finnish and international qualitative research. His career has gone from strength to strength as regards advancement in Finnish academia, as witnessed by some twenty books, and numerous articles in both Finnish and foreign journals. Yet Professor Alasuutari insists that he did not consciously choose the career of a sociologist. Professor Alasuutari completed his school education in Rovaniemi, Lapland in 1975 and went to study technology at the University of Oulu. But not for long. In 1977 he dropped out and began to dream of becoming a journalist, in the meantime doing supply teaching. 'In summer I studied journalism at summer university in Lapland and began my military service’ His days in the army driving a desk led him to another state agency. In autumn 1978 the train from the north arrived in Tampere with the 22-year-old on board. He had gained admission to study sociology. 'For the first year I only studied journalism, and didn′t even set foot in the Department of Sociology, ’ grins Professor Alasuutari. Career development In 1983 the Westermarck Society awarded a prize for a master′s thesis to the youthful Alasuutari. The thesis was entitled 'The Realm of Male Freedom’. The ethnographic approach was to describe the alcohol culture of a group of men patronizing a suburban pub.