48 research outputs found
Pleasure and meaningful discourse: an overview of research issues
The concept of pleasure has emerged as a multi-faceted social and cultural phenomenon in studies of media audiences since the 1980s. In these studies different forms of pleasure have been identified as explaining audience activity and commitment. In the diverse studies pleasure has emerged as a multi-faceted social and cultural concept that needs to be contextualized carefully. Genre and genre variations, class, gender, (sub-)cultural identity and generation all seem to be instrumental in determining the kind and variety of pleasures experienced in the act of viewing. This body of research has undoubtedly contributed to a better understanding of the complexity of audience activities, but it is exactly the diversity of the concept that is puzzling and poses a challenge to its further use. If pleasure is maintained as a key concept in audience analysis that holds much explanatory power, it needs a stronger theoretical foundation. The article maps the ways in which the concept of pleasure has been used by cultural theorists, who have paved the way for its application in reception analysis, and it goes on to explore the ways in which the concept has been used in empirical studies. Central to our discussion is the division between the âpublic knowledgeâ and the âpopular cultureâ projects in reception analysis which, we argue, have major implications for the way in which pleasure has come to be understood as divorced from politics, power and ideology. Finally, we suggest ways of bridging the gap between these two projects in an effort to link pleasure to the concepts of hegemony and ideology
Technology and feminism : a strange couple
The "gender digital divide" constitutes a prolific research program that compares the differences between women and men in access to Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). Nevertheless, those using feminist socio-constructivist perspectives argue for the need to pay attention, not only to "access," but also to "design," in addition to considering social relations as something that is coded within technological artifacts. From this perspective, gender constitutes an integral part of technological production. This paper explores the co-constitution of gender and technology, considering a specific action-research experience. It is argued that the re-signification of gendered and technological codes drifts through: a) the opening of gendered and technological codes; b) the production of new cultural imaginaries that question hegemonic representations of gender; and c) the production of new subjectivities through the reorganization of socio-technical practices to develop performative acts that transform patriarchal relationsLa "brecha digital de gĂ©nero" constituye un prolĂfico programa de investigaciĂłn que compara las diferencias entre mujeres y hombres en el acceso a las TecnologĂas de InformaciĂłn y ComunicaciĂłn. Las perspectivas socio-constructivistas feministas, sin embargo, abogan por la necesidad de prestar atenciĂłn no sĂłlo al "acceso", sino tambiĂ©n al "diseño", y consideran las relaciones sociales como elementos codificados en el interior los artefactos tecnolĂłgicos. Desde esta perspectiva, el gĂ©nero constituye una parte integral de la producciĂłn tecnolĂłgica. Este trabajo explora la constituciĂłn conjunta de gĂ©nero y tecnologĂa a partir de una experiencia de investigaciĂłn-acciĂłn especĂfica. Se argumenta que la resignificaciĂłn de los cĂłdigos de gĂ©nero y tecnolĂłgicos se desplaza a travĂ©s de: a) la apertura de los cĂłdigos de gĂ©nero y tecnolĂłgicos; b) la producciĂłn de nuevos imaginarios culturales que cuestionan las representaciones hegemĂłnicas de gĂ©nero; y c) la producciĂłn de nuevas subjetividades a travĂ©s de la reorganizaciĂłn de las prĂĄcticas socio-tĂ©cnicas para el desarrollo de actos performativos que transforman las relaciones patriarcales