Codes and narrative conventions are the fundamental tools through which media producers construct meaning. Understanding their relationship — and how they work together — is central to both media analysis and media production.
Media codes are systems of signs that carry meaning within a culture. They operate as a shared language between producer and audience. Codes are typically categorised as:
| Code Type | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Technical codes | Use of technology to construct meaning | Camera angles, lighting, editing, sound mixing |
| Symbolic codes | Culturally shared meanings attached to objects, settings, behaviour | Red = danger/passion; dark lighting = threat; costume signalling status |
| Written codes | Language, captions, titles, dialogue | Headlines, intertitles, on-screen text |
| Audio codes | Music, sound effects, silence, dialogue delivery | Non-diegetic score, ambient sound, voiceover |
Narrative conventions are the established patterns, structures, and expectations that audiences bring to a media form based on genre and historical precedent. They include:
Codes and narrative conventions do not operate independently — they work together to produce meaning:
The primary function of codes and conventions is to communicate efficiently with audiences by drawing on shared cultural knowledge. This enables:
In the opening sequence of Get Out (2017, dir. Peele), conventional horror codes (low-key lighting, isolated setting, non-diegetic tense score) are deployed within a narrative convention (young man entering a threatening environment). However, the protagonist is Black and the threat comes from a superficially ‘liberal’ white family — this subverts audience expectations and generates additional layers of social meaning.
EXAM TIP: Always identify the specific code type (technical, symbolic, written, audio), describe how it functions within the narrative context, and explain the meaning it produces for the audience. A three-part response — identify, describe, analyse — earns full marks.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA expects students to use precise media language. Do not write ‘the camera shows’ — write ‘the use of a low-angle shot positions the audience to perceive the character as powerful’.