MEDIA ISSUES CONCERNING ORAL COMMUNICATORS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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MEDIA ISSUES CONCERNING ORAL COMMUNICATORS

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Fixed Expressions It's fixin' to rain cats and dogs! ... Models and Dioramas (tent of meeting model or diaroma of tabernacle compound) Drama ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MEDIA ISSUES CONCERNING ORAL COMMUNICATORS


1
MEDIA ISSUES CONCERNING ORAL COMMUNICATORS
2
Media make use of symbols to convey meaning
expressed as facts, intention, emotion
3
Media are perceived by the physical senses
  • vision ? hearing
  • hearing ? vision
  • touch
  • taste
  • smell

4
Oral Communicators Primarily Make Use of Three
Media
  • Oral Media
  • Visual Media
  • Touch Media

5
Oral Media
  • Stereotyped DescriptionsHes meaner than a wart
    hog!
  • Fixed ExpressionsIts fixin to rain cats and
    dogs!
  • Proverbs (stories condensed to a statement)A
    stitch in time saves nine.
  • Narrated storiesWell sir, it happened like
    this

6
Oral Media continued
  • Songs (ballads)
  • Poetic Rhythmic Chanting
  • Drama (which also combines elements of visual
    literacy)
  • Sound Effects (vocalized sounds, created physical
    sounds)

7
The Conventions of Media
  • Oral Conventions jokes, anecdotes, gossip,
    entertainment stories, heritage stories
  • Visual Conventions color, perspective, social
    convention decorum, relationship and position,
    contextualization
  • Touch Conventions use of hands feet, touching
    the head or body, embrace, kiss

8
Visual Media are entertaining in that they
attract and hold attention while communicating
meaning
9
Visual Media
  • Facial Expressions
  • Physical gestures (use of hand gestures, other
    body and foot positions movement)
  • Metaphors as implied visual media (concrete
    images)
  • Simple Drawings (stick figures)
  • Flat Pictures (line drawings, shaded drawings,
    color)

10
Visual Media continued
  • Models and Dioramas (tent of meeting model or
    diaroma of tabernacle compound)
  • Drama
  • Dance

11
Touch Media
  • Holding the listener while speaking
  • Touching for emphasis
  • Touching for effect as in ritual
  • Striking in anger or punishment

12
Combined Media
  • Storytelling Gestures
  • In South Louisiana if you cut off a Cajuns hands
    he cant talk!
  • Even among many semi-literate Chinese they will
    draw the Chinese character in the palm of their
    hand to be sure the listener knows which tonal
    character is being used

13
Combined Media continued
  • Use of objects, referral to real or imagined
    symbolic scenes and objects in discourse
  • Bread cup in Last SupperParable of the
    SowerThe Bread come down from heaven
  • Drink of living water
  • Referral to widow casting her mites in treasury

14
Combined Media continued
  • Use of objects, referral to real or imagined
    symbolic scenes and objects in discourse
  • Tear down this temple and I will build it again
    in three days
  • As Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert
  • As Jonah was in the belly of the fish three
    days
  • As it was in the days of Noah

15
Combined Media continued
  • Jesus writing on the ground
  • Jesus use of touch
  • mud in healing, touching the leper, taking
    Jairus daughter by the hand
  • Jesus use of demonstrative actioncleansing the
    temple with whip and overturning tables
  • Other ritual used by oral communicators healing
    (herbalists, witch doctors), exorcism, symbolic
    rituals (rites of passage)

16
Considerations of Media Use in Support of
Storying Among Oral Communicators
17
Advantages
  • Engages more than one sense hearing sight,
    sight hearing, hearing touch
  • Illustrates unknown concepts (pictures of unknown
    objects, rituals and scenes)
  • Punctuates the told story, adding interest and
    expression

18
Advantages (continued)
  • Qualifies otherwise unqualified communicators
  • Attract hold attention of audience (especially
    culturally appropriate media)

19
Disadvantages
  • Circumstances may limit use of specific media
  • May introduce unwanted concepts or socially
    inappropriate image or idea
  • Cost and supply of teaching media like pictures

20
Disadvantages (continued)
  • May distract audience or provide confusing or
    conflicting message
  • Difficulty of maintaining performance of folk
    media

21
Media Consideration Summarized
  • Appropriate (socially, culturally, spiritually)
  • Reproducible (cost, skill, availability)
  • Constructive, supportive not detracting

22
Teaching Pictures
  • Advantages
  • Attract attention and hold it
  • Illustrate unfamiliar objects and scenes
  • Show sequence of events, existing condition,
    elements of plot and outcome, depict characters
  • Help to guide listeners to see the same scene
    and discourage substituting their own scene
  • Useful in review of stories
  • Help to qualify otherwise unqualified storyers

23
Teaching Pictures
  • Disadvantages
  • Availability and cost if used in large number
  • Poor technique in use
  • Need to replace damaged or lost pictures
  • Lack of certain needed pictures
  • Lack of a sequence of pictures
  • Wrong aspect or portrayal of a scene
  • Culturally or socially unsuitable
  • Creates dependence on pictures when telling

24
Audio Cassettes
  • Advantages
  • Once recorded can be widely reproduced and
    distributed at relatively low cost
  • Provide a quality or at least adequate telling of
    stories
  • Provide stories in dialects or mother tongue
    languages storyer is unskilled in speaking
  • Always tells the story the same way!
  • Can be left with listeners for continued listening

25
Audio Cassettes
  • Disadvantages
  • Cassette players may be needed adding to cost or
    distribution difficulties
  • Cassettes are easily damaged or destroyed by
    careless users, or erased
  • Cassettes may fall into wrong hands or be
    outlawed
  • Storytellers dialect may not be a universal or
    widely acceptable language
  • Cost or recovery of cost in large distributions

26
Video Media
  • Advantages
  • Very attractive form of presentation with color,
    sound and drama
  • Powerful emotional impact possible
  • Recorded media like VCD and DVDs are very
    compact and easily carried or concealed
  • Possibility of multiple sound tracks on same
    video
  • Can be distributed so locals can use without a
    storyer present
  • Cant be erased unless videocassette

27
Video Media
  • Disadvantages
  • Initial cost of production or translation dubbing
  • Used alone does not provide the community
    discussion and response
  • Requires expensive and delicate equipment
  • Visualizing some scenes may involve social or
    cultural issues
  • For some viewers provides too much story at one
    viewing unless broken into episodes
  • May not be available in needed languages

28
Film
  • Advantages
  • Viewing by large audience possible
  • Already an established media in many places
  • Can be used alone or in support of live
    storytelling
  • Existing films are powerful and proven in use
  • Some commercial religious films are also useful
    if available in needed languages

29
Film
  • Disadvantages
  • Cost of film media and projection equipment
  • Film events often need police permits
  • Film shows are dependent upon available power
  • Improper use of film may stem from stopping the
    film, sole use of film without live intro and
    closure
  • Film is difficult to disguise in closed countries

30
Radio
  • Advantages
  • Can reach a potentially large audience
    simultaneously
  • Can reach into places inaccessible to storyers
  • Provides distancing where hostility is a
    problem
  • Radio is still a very popular medium
  • Recorded stories and lessons can also e
    circulated as audiocassettes
  • Makes use of music and quality recording and
    professional storytellers
  • Can be used to get response from those desiring a
    local storying session

31
Radio
  • Disadvantages
  • Production and airtime cost
  • Lack of face to face contact requires special
    consideration of format especially for processing
    of story
  • Listeners may not be consistent, missing key
    stories or portions of story by distractions
  • Program time limit must be considered
  • Scheduling of language blocks needed

32
Folk Media
  • Culturally appropriate and affordable
  • Generally endlessly reproducible
  • May make stories acceptable even by hostile
    audiences
  • Likely to spread far and wide within a people
    group
  • Must be generated from within the culture
  • May be viewed by some believers are pagan or
    belonging to the old way

33
Media Recap
  • Heighten storytelling experience
  • Clarify unfamiliar scenes or items in stories
  • Provide for repetition
  • Provide quality presentation
  • Reach inaccessible peoples
  • Qualify otherwise unqualified storyers
  • Provide a useful tool for local evangelists

34
But in the long run nothing really replaces a
living storyteller who knows the stories and can
energize them in his or her telling and
interaction with listeners. Jesus said YOU
shall be my witnesses
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