Multimodal and monomodal discourses of marketization in higher education : power, ideology, and the absence of the image


Autoria(s): Mills, Kathy A.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

The ubiquity of multimodality in hypermedia environments is undeniable. Bezemer and Kress (2008) have argued that writing has been displaced by image as the central mode for representation. Given the current technical affordances of digital technology and user-friendly interfaces that enable the ease of multimodal design, the conspicuous absence of images in certain domains of cyberspace is deserving of critical analysis. In this presentation, I examine the politics of discourses implicit within hypertextual spaces, drawing textual examples from a higher education website. I critically examine the role of writing and other modes of production used in what Fairclough (1993) refers to as discourses of marketisation in higher education, tracing four pervasive discourses of teaching and learning in the current economy: i) materialization, ii) personalization, iii) technologisation, and iv) commodification (Fairclough, 1999). Each of these arguments is supported by the critical analysis of multimodal texts. The first is a podcast highlighting the new architectonic features of a university learning space. The second is a podcast and transcript of a university Open Day interview with prospective students. The third is a time-lapse video showing the construction of a new science and engineering precinct. These three multimodal texts contrast a final web-based text that exhibits a predominance of writing and the powerful absence or silencing of the image. I connect the weightiness of words and the function of monomodality in the commodification of discourses, and its resistance to the multimodal affordances of web-based technologies, and how this is used to establish particular sets of subject positions and ideologies through which readers are constrained to occupy. Applying principles of critical language study by theorists that include Fairclough, Kress, Lemke, and others whose semiotic analysis of texts focuses on the connections between language, power, and ideology, I demonstrate how the denial of image and the privileging of written words in the multimodality of cyberspace is an ideological effect to accentuate the dominance of the institution.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/52711/

Publicador

American Educational Research Association

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/52711/8/52711%28extended_abstract%29.pdf

Mills, Kathy A. (2013) Multimodal and monomodal discourses of marketization in higher education : power, ideology, and the absence of the image. In Education and Poverty : Theory, Research, Policy and Praxis : Proceedings of AERA Annual Meeting 2013, American Educational Research Association, San Francisco, Calif.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 please consult the author

This abstract cannot be reproduced in part or in full without permission from the author.

Fonte

Children & Youth Research Centre; Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #130103 Higher Education #higher education #disourses #marketization #commodification #multimodality #writing #absence of image #semiotics #critical #HERN
Tipo

Conference Paper