Audiences are not passive recipients of media narratives. The study of audience engagement examines how viewers, listeners, and readers actively make meaning from media products — and why different people read the same text differently.
Stuart Hall (1980) proposed that media texts are encoded by producers with a preferred meaning, but decoded by audiences in one of three positions:
| Reading Position | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Dominant/preferred | Audience accepts the producer’s intended meaning | Viewer accepts a news bulletin’s framing of a political event |
| Negotiated | Audience partly accepts, partly rejects the preferred meaning | Viewer agrees with the news story but questions the emphasis |
| Oppositional | Audience rejects the preferred meaning entirely | Viewer reads the news story as ideologically biased |
KEY TAKEAWAY: Hall’s model demonstrates that meaning is not fixed in a text — it is produced through the interaction of the text with the audience.
Bulmer and Katz (1974) argued that audiences actively seek out media to satisfy specific needs:
- Information/surveillance: staying informed about the world
- Personal identity: finding confirmation of personal values in media
- Social integration: using shared media as a basis for social interaction
- Entertainment/escapism: diversion from everyday concerns
Active engagement involves conscious critical analysis — a student watching a documentary and questioning its framing.
Passive engagement involves unreflective consumption — scrolling through social media without interrogating source or intent.
Participatory engagement involves audiences co-creating meaning through comments, fan fiction, memes, and remixes — particularly relevant to digital media.
How audiences consume media has shifted dramatically with digital technology:
- Binge-watching (streaming platforms like Netflix) changes narrative pacing expectations
- Second-screen viewing (using a phone while watching TV) fragments attention
- Algorithm-driven feeds (TikTok, Instagram) shape what narratives reach which audiences
- On-demand consumption removes the shared viewing experience of broadcast television
Audiences bring prior knowledge, cultural background, personal experience, and ideological frameworks to every media encounter. These influence:
- Which details they notice
- How they interpret characters and events
- What emotional response they have
- Whether they accept or resist the preferred reading
For example, a film depicting a war may produce patriotic readings in audiences from the ‘winning’ nation and oppositional readings in audiences from the ‘defeated’ nation.
EXAM TIP: Use the correct terminology — audiences ‘read’, ‘engage with’, and ‘consume’ media narratives. Avoid saying audiences ‘watch’ or ‘receive’ unless discussing a specific medium. Always link reading position to the specific codes and conventions that invite or resist it.
COMMON MISTAKE: Do not conflate ‘target audience’ (the audience the producer intends to reach) with ‘actual audience’ (those who actually consume the text). These are often different, and the gap between them is analytically significant.