Representation in media refers to the process by which media producers use codes and conventions to present people, places, events, and ideas. Representations are constructions — they are selective, partial, and ideologically loaded.
Representations are built through the cumulative effect of media codes:
These choices accumulate to construct a representation that carries ideological meaning — even when the producer claims to be ‘neutral’ or ‘objective’.
Representations often reflect the dominant views and values of the context in which they are produced:
Some media narratives deliberately challenge dominant representations:
| Concept | Definition |
|---|---|
| Stereotype | An oversimplified, generalised representation of a group, often reflecting and reinforcing prejudice |
| Archetype | A universally recognised character pattern (the wise elder, the reluctant hero) — less loaded than stereotype |
| Counter-narrative | A narrative that deliberately contests dominant representations |
| Positive representation | A representation that affirms the dignity, complexity, and humanity of a group |
Audiences bring their own subject positions to representations. A dominant reading accepts the preferred representation; an oppositional reading resists it. The same representation of a cultural group may be read as accurate by some audience members and as stereotypical or offensive by others — particularly by members of the group being represented.
VCAA FOCUS: Use the verb ‘construct’ rather than ‘show’ or ‘portray’ — this signals that you understand representation as an active, ideological process, not a neutral reflection of reality.
EXAM TIP: A strong representation analysis identifies the specific codes used, explains how they construct the representation, links the representation to the context of production, and evaluates whether it reflects or challenges dominant views and values.