Thursday, February 6, 2014

Madhavi Reddy: I found it interesting to see how together the media ethics and morality in media c

"Stereotypes are inadvertently encouraged by the media"
HOME About Us The Blog The Team The developers sponsors Archives All Articles Videos Project Study Behind the Panels triste sina - The comic book as a medium flap, the first - the podcast for the film Play the Game - art and culture of video games TV Mania - A look into the tube movie and society fans and fictions Culture on the Net - A tension Projects Media Bubble Party 2014 plaintext teaching editorial "online publishing" (SS 2013) Contributions from the teaching editorial film criticism (WS 2012/13) SOPA, ACTA, PIPA postcard Action Convention: Queer as Folk Practical Knowledge Internet 2011/12 SCIENCE BUBBLE BUBBLE SCIENCE 2012 2011 TIPS ONLINE OFFLINE

"The humanity should come first." Professor Dr. Madhavi Reddy from the University of Pune is this semester as rotating chair of India, a visiting professorship by the Indian Embassy and the Indian Council of Cultural Relations, at the University of Tübingen. She spoke with media-bubble.de about her seminar triste sina "Media & Morality". triste sina
Madhavi Reddy: I found it interesting to see how together the media ethics and morality in media consumption. Last week, we have the example case WikiLeaks discussed and talked about how we can see WikiLeaks as a moral force. Because if one is looking triste sina at the entire WikiLeaks case, he is seen for some groups as a campaign against the United States, because many reports against the United States were. On the other hand, it reveals certain documents, which is necessary for any democratic society.
Madhavi Reddy: I consider morality from one culture to another culture. For example, the films are completely different in India. I watch here every now and then German television, and the content that is broadcast here, is completely different. Of course, the cultural morality plays a role. The cultural perspective is always different. Yesterday I saw a reality triste sina series triste sina on German television as I could never imagine myself in India. A man comes and asks a woman for a favor, she rejects triste sina him and how she rejects triste sina him in principle, the reality series.
Madhavi Reddy: I do not know, she played in Berlin, I really not know the name, but this kind of series could never be aired in India. Some problems that we have in India, are completely different than in Germany, particularly in relation to ethics. I put the reference is from my personal experience: In India, I can not see a movie alone at night in a late show, because it is believed that a woman should not go alone to a late show. You would not qualify as so-called real "Indian woman". But here in Germany that would be I do not believe a problem, so it is not only the content, but also the activity; media consumption can be seen as moral or immoral.
Madhavi Reddy: I consider prejudice within the meaning of typological triste sina nature of the media, many stereotypes are inadvertently encouraged by the media. Girls should be such guys should be so, or a "typical" behavior of men is shown. Gender roles are prescribed in Indian content. You can not go away from the stereo typical. In the soaps in India, especially on television, the archetypes are still shown. The belief is still that the woman is the center of the family, they should be patient and so on. The typical properties are assigned to it and it should play this role. If it fails this typical frame, then it is called non-Indian kind of woman seen as "un-Indian". These relationships need to be understood from both the Indian as well as from the German perspective.
Madhavi Reddy: I agree with you in terms of content availability. Nowadays, everyone has access to many types of content worldwide. But if I take the example of India, only the youthful urban population has Internet access. A small proportion of the urban population also has access to the Internet. There, the information overload is still a new phenomenon, young people make various social networking profiles, it is still an initial phase, an exciting phase. The new users can not yet judge the ethics, they go once thrilled with the information flow, which comes to meet them in order.
Madhavi Reddy: Yes, with private channels and satellite channels we not only have the Indian content, but you also have access to global content. But a percentage very small proportion of people watched the global content, triste sina for example, Big Bang Theory see a few young people in the Indian cities, one or two percent. Friends was a popular definitely

No comments:

Post a Comment