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Media, Culture & Society http://mcs.sagepub.com Credibility of media offerings in centrally controlled media systems: a qualitative study based on the example of East Germany Michael Meyen and Katja Schwer Media Culture Society 2007; 29; 284 DOI: 10.1177/0163443707074260 The online version of this article can be found at: http://mcs.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/29/2/284 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com Additional services and information for Media, Culture & Society can be found at: Email Alerts: http://mcs.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://mcs.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav Citations http://mcs.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/29/2/284 Downloaded from http://mcs.sagepub.com by Carla Cruz on October 16, 2008 Credibility of media offerings in centrally controlled media systems: a qualitative study based on the example of East Germany Michael Meyen and Katja Schwer MUNICH UNIVERSITY The issue In the early 1970s, Ithiel de Sola Pool tried to systematize the effects of cen- trally controlled and supervised media systems on audiences. Analyzing letters addressed to Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty from listeners throughout Eastern Europe, he identified the following consequences for media use in countries governed by authoritarian governments: continuous retreat to pri- vacy, declining political interest and decreasing credibility of the official media. According to these findings, citizens’ desire for reliable information made foreign radio programs become their primary source of information and increased the importance of rumors within society (Sola Pool, 1973). If these assumptions are correct and central control of the media system really leads people to look for trustworthy information – and thus to turn primarily to for- eign broadcasts – this would be an indication that the political system and media offerings do indeed have an impact on communication needs. However, these findings need to be reconsidered, both on a methodologi- cal and a theoretical level. Sola Pool based his study solely on statements made by people who dared to write letters to the West. One should not gen- eralize from the attitude of these letter writers to the rest of the population. The main reason for this is that these assumptions are inconsistent with what is known about media use in industrialized countries. Most people consume entertainment programs offered by mass media in order to relax, lessen the strains of reality and escape to another world, to kill time, combat boredom, have things to talk about and keep themselves busy (Vorderer, 2000). The media are comforters and places of refuge, a substitute for religion and social Media,Culture & Society © 2007 SAGE Publications (Los Angeles, London, New Delhi and Singapore), Vol. 29(2): 284–303 [ISSN: 0163-4437 DOI: 10.1177/0163443707074260] Downloaded from http://mcs.sagepub.com by Carla Cruz on October 16, 2008 Meyen & Schwer, Credibility of media offerings 285 contacts; they provide role models and have an ‘opiate’effect. Add to this the desire to understand and control one’s immediate environment – a wish as unrealistic in the German Democratic Republic as in Western societies. In such a situation, news programs can provide security by providing up-to-date information within a few minutes, making its users believe that they are well informed (Brosius, 1995). However, only a minority of the population is interested in distinct political formats such as news broadcasts, radio com- mentaries or editorials. Of all the socialist states in Eastern Europe, access to Western media was easiest in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR). Radio and TV programs produced in the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) had to over- come neither language nor cultural barriers, nor large geographical distances. Tuning in to Western broadcast stations was a normal fact of life for many East Germans (Dittmar, 2004; Meyen and Hillman, 2003). Radio programs from West Germany could be received throughout the country (at least via medium waveband), and 85 percent of viewers were able to watch Western TV broadcasts. Whereas the Communist Party had initially tried to limit reception by launching ideological campaigns and operating jamming sta- tions, moral pressure eased off gradually and, by the mid 1970s, consumption of Western media items was officially tolerated (Steinmetz and Viehoff, 2004: 320). How did East German citizens cope with this situation? What programs did they watch or listen to and whom did they trust? Were Western radio pro- grams really their primary source of information, as Sola Pool claimed? And, to go a step further: what did people’s attitude towards media offerings from East and West depend on? Determinants of communication needs So far there has been no comprehensive theoretical approach that systemati- cally considers all factors that affect media consumption. Although work based on the uses-and-gratifications tradition (Rubin, 2002) includes some extensive catalogues of needs to be met by the media (e.g. McQuail, 2003: 388) and underpins several of these needs with theoretical concepts, some of which derive from sociology and social psychology (e.g. para-social interac- tion, social comparison or curiosity and mood management), these very approaches do not heed the societal causes for the various forms of media use. Models that explain media consumption not only by referring to basic human needs, but also by focusing on media content and social environment, rely pri- marily on individual cases. Analytical categories therefore refer to individu- als, rather than to society as a whole and obscure the impact of social structures. Cultural studies attempts to offer a response to the shortcomings of the uses-and-gratifications approach with regard to the social dimensions of media consumption, pursuing media analysis as social analysis. The field Downloaded from http://mcs.sagepub.com by Carla Cruz on October 16, 2008 286 Media, Culture & Society 29(2) can look back on a long-standing research tradition on popular cultural con- sumption, situating an understanding of consumption within the structures of everyday life in general, and with regard to women’s routines and patterns in particular (e.g. Hobson, 1980; Morley, 1986; Nightingale, 1990; Silverstone, 1994). Yet, even within cultural studies, most audience research is based on observations of individual cases, neglecting the premise of this research tra- dition that analyzing media means analyzing society at the same time (cf. Morley, 1992). For societal analysis, however, inference from individual cases to the aggregate societal level poses a methodological problem. Looking at the shortcomings of these research traditions, the lifestyle con- cept promises more success. This might seem paradoxical at first, as research into lifestyles stresses the role of the individual, rather than focusing on socie- tal conditions, and therefore appears to be consistent with the trend of research into individual media consumption. Market research often defines lifestyle sim- ply as patterns of action in terms of consumption and leisure time, and some- times translates the concept as ‘social milieu’ (Featherstone, 1987; Vyncke, 2002). Rosengren (1994) modified this concept, highlighting the fact that all actions, including media use, are determined by structural, positional, and indi- vidual characteristics and conditions. Figure 1 illustrates the paramount signif- icance of structural characteristics, which not only have an impact on all patterns of action, but also influence positional and individual characteristics and give some indication as to which factors determine media consumption. Rosengren’s enumeration does not claim to be complete. It seems that the scale of possible factors is open-ended and may be filled as desired. To give just a few examples: what is the role of media offerings and media law, popu- lation density and mentality, family size, peer group or the current phase of one’s life? And what role does infrastructure, including transport routes and leisure-time activities play, which may present potential alternatives to media consumption? Rosengren’s lifestyle model cannot compensate for the lack of a theory explaining the correlation between mass communication and society. However,it suggests some factors that might have had an impact on the accept- ance of media offerings and their credibility. Unlike positional characteristics, FIGURE 1 Determinants of patterns of action (Rosengren, 1994) Societal Individual Individual structure position characteristics Patterns of Industrialization Sex Values action Urbanization Age Beliefs Religion Education Downloaded from http://mcs.sagepub.com by Carla Cruz on October 16, 2008
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