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The Dynamics of
Mass Communication
Seventh Edition
Joseph R. Dominick
Part 1
The Nature and History of
Mass Communications
Chapter 3
Historical and
Cultural Context
Seven Milestones in the History
of Human Communication
•
Language
200,000-100,00 B.C.
•
Writing
3500 B.C.
•
Printing
A.D. 1500
Seven Milestones in the History
of Human Communication
•
Photography and
Motion Pictures
•
1800s – 1900s
Telephone and
Telegraph
1800s – 1900s
•
Radio and Television
1900s
•
Computers / Internet
1900s
The Seven Milestones Timeline
Language
Made possible oral-based societies
Members needed exceptional memories
Premium on older people as “memory banks”
Limit to “stored and accessible” knowledge
Challenges:
How to keep information accurate
Passing knowledge from one generation to next
Difficulty keeping long-term records
Writing
Two initial problems:
What symbols do you use to represent ideas?
What writing surface works best?
Sign Writing vs. Phonetic Writing
Two approaches:
Graphic symbols representing objects
Chinese pictographs
Egyptian hieroglyphics
Abstract symbols (alphabet) for ideas/sounds
Phoenician 24-character alphabet
Roman-modified 26-character alphabet
Clay vs. Paper
Cuneiform
Sumeria
wedge-shaped clay tablets
Papyrus
Egypt
woven papyrus plants
Parchment
Greece
sheep/goat hides
Paper
China
pressed wood and fiber pulp
Social Impact of Writing
Created social divisions: readers vs. illiterates
Access to power garnered through knowledge
Encouraged birth and growth of ancient empires
Collective knowledge accumulates over time
Laws codified and universally administered
Writing During the Dark Ages
Begins with fall of Rome in the 6th century
Demand for books continues to rise, but . . .
Slow, costly hand-copying restricts supplies
Mistakes common and cumulative
Writing During the Dark Ages
No filing or cross-indexing system in place
Content moves from religion to lay areas
Trade spreads, universities begin, AD 1150
European Scriptorias (writing shops) flourish
Printing
The introduction of
moveable type is the start
of mass communication, an
event of immense importance
to Western civilization.
Printing
Effects of the Gutenberg Revolution
Standardizes, popularizes native languages
Which, in turn, encourages nationalism
Information now available to common man
More books fuel demand for wider literacy
Effects of the Gutenberg Revolution
Spawns new social and religious doctrines
Speeds books, research in scientific research
Encourages exploration with maps and exploits
Human knowledge base grows exponentially
Eventually leads to what we would call “news”
Technological Determinism
Belief that technology (e.g., invention of moveable
type) basically drives historical change. Others
counter that technology functions with various
social, economic, and cultural forces to help
bring about changes.
The Telegraph and Telephone
The Telegraph
Invention of telegraph speeds communication
from 30 mph limit to 186,000 miles per second
First to make instantaneous, point-to-point,
long-distance communication possible
Morse Code uses system of dots and dashes
Telegraph: the Cultural Impact
By 1850 most large U.S. cities linked together
1866 Trans-Atlantic cable links U.S. to Europe
Standardizes, stabilizes, and links market
prices, changing how we buy and sell goods
Becomes indispensable military tool
Allows up-to-date news from distant sources
The Telephone
Along with the telegraph, telephones change
our perspective of time and space
First “no-experience-required, user-friendly”
communication device
AT&T dominates telephone industry just as
Western Union dominates the telegraph
Photography
and Motion Pictures
Two inventions make photography possible:
• way to focus light rays onto a surface (1500s pinhole
device, camera obscura, solves problem)
• way to permanently store and copy the images
• Glass plates (Daguerreotypes) first solution
• Wm. Talbot, England, invents film paper
• George Eastman introduces “Brownie,” 1890s
Photojournalism
• Mathew Brady chronicles U.S. Civil War, the first
photographically recorded war
• Photography “frees” art from depicting real world
• Demand for photographic coverage of events
creates market for picture periodicals such as
Life and Look magazines; news definition now
modified to news is that which can be shown
Pictures in Motion
Three great social movements fuel demand
for motion pictures:
• industrialization
• urbanization
• immigration
Nickelodeons, 10,000 store-front theaters by 1910s,
also help create film industry infrastructure
Motion Pictures and American Culture
• Motion pictures center around large cash-rich
firms and quickly dominate the three-prongs of
the film industry:
• Production
• Distribution
• Exhibition
• Film kills Vaudeville (which frees talent for radio later)
Motion Pictures and American Culture
• Film becomes new popular leisure time activity
• Film images and stars become national icons
• Films portray model “American” values and
culture
• 1930 Payne Fund examines film medium, first
serious effort to study potential media effects
• 1930s “newsreels” are forerunner to TV news
Radio and Television
Radio (or “wireless”) debuts around 1910 as a
byproduct of research in physics
WWI military leaders encourage radio R&D; in so
doing, they end bottleneck patent war problems
The term broadcasting is coined to describe Radio’s
“one to many” format
First medium to bring mass entertainment into the
American living room
Radio’s evolution
The manufacturing of radio sets was originally seen
as the best way to make a profit in the new industry
In the 1920s, AT&T introduces idea of selling
audiences to companies; leased air time becomes
“advertising”
In 1927 the Federal Radio Commission is created to
regulate radio’s tech side: frequency and signal
strength
By late 1920s three networks emerge: CBS and
NBC (the latter with two, NBC red and NBC Blue)
Radio’s evolution
In 1934 the Federal Communication Commission
replaces FRC; oversees entire electromagnetic
spectrum
Radio content targeted for national mass appeal
The radio is a household staple during Great
Depression
Exodus of vaudeville actors gives radio new stars
By WWII, radio journalism emerges as a strong, new
national and local source of news
Radio’s Cultural Impact
Serves to popularize music and performers
Introduces new entertainment genre: the soap
opera; boasts 60% of daytime programs by 1940
First to aim mass content at children
Invents new comedy genre: the sitcom
Becomes main source of at-home entertainment:
concept of evening “prime time” hours begins
Television
Developed decades earlier, but hampered by
the Great Depression, WWII, and regulatory
problems, TV finally emerges in early 1950s
TV is now in 99% of all U.S. homes, and is on
over seven hours per day. It’s our third largest
time consumer following sleep and work
Fosters “everything/everywhere” expectation
Helps create a new “global village” mentality
The Digital Revolution
Described as an information delivery shift
from the “slow moving” material world made of
atoms to the instantaneous and virtual world
made up of “0s” and “1s,” or bits
Digital technology and the Internet are
creating a revolution in the way information is
transmitted, accessed, shared, and stored
Problems of the Digital Age
Idea of “community” is changing, with bonds
based on needs or interests rather than locality
Fostering new era of physical and social isolation
How we govern, vote, get politically involved and
influence our leaders is changing rapidly
Society’s new “Digital Divide” -- a widening gap
between those who have the training and wealth
to use computers and those who don’t
Concluding Observations
It’s difficult to accurately predict the ultimate
use of any new mass medium .
However, it appears that the emergence of
any new communication advance changes,
but does not make extinct those advances
that came before it.
End of Chapter 3
Historical and Cultural Context