1. The Encoding/Decoding Model of Communication
Communication 501: Mid-term Essay
Marsha Ann Tate
October 9, 2000
Dr. Davis
2. 2
Introduction
This essay examines the encoding/decoding model of communication first
proposed by Stuart Hall in the early 1970's. The essay begins with a brief exploration of
the theoretical origins of the model followed by an explanation of the model itself.
Origins and Development
Although the encoding/decoding model of transmission dates back to the
1970's, its theoretical roots are much older. "Critical theory", one of the main theoretical
foundations of the model, initially referred to the post 1933 emigration of scholars from
the Marxist School of Applied Social Research in Frankfurt to the United States. The
School, originally established to "... examine the apparent failure of revolutionary social
change as predicted by Marx" and "... looked to the capacity of the 'superstructure'
(especially ideas and ideology represented in the mass media)" to account for the failure
of Marxism (McQuail, 2000, p. 95).
The "Frankfurt School" promoted of alternate view of dominant commercial mass
culture namely the non-acceptance of liberal-capitalist order as well as the " ... rational-
calculative, utilitarian model of social life as at all adequate or desirable" (McQuail,
2000, p. 49) and viewed mass communication "... as manipulative and ultimately
oppressive" (McQuail, 2000, p. 49).
Post WWII & Cold War Era in US
Frankfurt School-based theories generated some support in academia during the
years prior to WWII. However, with the advent of the Cold War and the accompanying
"Red scare" in the United States, espousal of Marxist-based theories became "out of
favor" and therefore received relatively little attention during this period. Instead,
3. 3
American research largely followed an empirical, socio-behavioral course that examined
issues of ....
A similar dominant paradigm existed in Europe until 1960s. However, this was
paradigm was challenged by a wave of NeoMarxist thought driven by French and later
British academics. This "second wave" offered a refinement and reevaluation of earlier
ideas proposed by the Frankfurt School and others. The reemerging critical theory
regarded mass communication as one component of broader "cultural studies" and
attacked "... the commercial roots of cultural 'debasement'" (McQuail, 2000, p. 95). Early
advocates directed their attention toward issues of working-class subordination and later
encompassed domination of youth, gender, ethnicity, and alternative subcultures.
The theory challenged predominant methodologies of empirical social science
audience research as well as "... the humanistic studies of content" (McQuail, 2000, p. 56)
Proponents argued that both methods failed to factor in the 'power of the audience' in
"giving meaning to messages" (McQuail, 2000, p. 56). Instead, critical theories
emphasized qualitative research: "This has provided alternative routes to knowledge and
forged a link back to the neglected pathways of sociological theory of symbolic
interactionism and phenomenology" (McQuail, 2000, p. 50).
British cultural studies & The Birmingham School
In Britain, "cultural studies" combined "... Marxist theory with ideas and research
methods derived from diverse sources including literary criticism, linguistics,
anthropology, and history" (Baran & Davis, 321). The Centre for Contemporary Cultural
Studies (CCCS) at the University of Birmingham has been called the "... most influential
recent British powerhouse of theorizing about culture" (Hartley, 1999, p. 116). The
4. 4
School, founded by Richard Hoggart during the 1960s and under the directorship of
Stuart Hall beginning in 1970, engaged in a systematic analysis of culture. The analysis,
based upon Marxist principles and class, was "... intended not to describe culture
but to change it" (Hartley, 1999, p. 116). Consequently, the School's early studies
concentrated on class and subcultures (e.g., tracing the historic elite domination over
culture and critique of the social consequences of the domination) while it later also
examined gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity (Kellner, 1995, p. 52). In addition, it also
considered the question of how audiences decode (i.e., make sense of) media output
within their various social contexts (Dutton, 1997, p. 116). From this critical perspective,
the media's was viewed as helping "... set the agenda to decide which issues will be
examined within what is taken to be a framework of consensus, i.e., the national interest"
(Dutton, 1997, p. 62).
Model of Encoding-Decoding Media Discourse & Audience Reception Theory (Stuart
Hall) -- 1980
During the 1970's, Hall and his Birmingham School colleagues explored
various British subcultures including "teddy boys", rockers, etc. As an outgrowth of this
earlier research, Hall formulated a variation of critical theory that brought together
critical and interpretive/qualitative aspects to the study of audiences. According to Hall,
the mass media are central to modern capitalist culture since they are the primary
resource for the meaningful organisation and "patterning" of people's experience. In this
they are intimately related to the technico-economic and social processes of modern
capitalism" (Tomlinson, 1991, p. 60). Moreover, he proposed "... that the hegemonic
power of the media" could be revealed through the study of social and ideological
processes rather than "by individual psychology or personal experience" (Nightingale,
5. 5
199?, p. 21).
The resulting theory, influenced by semiology and discourse analysis, was more
closely related to cultural rather than the social scientific realm as some presumptions of
semiology and structuralism were accepted while others were challenged. In addition,
Hall rejected the transmission model of communication and the idea of "fixed messages",
citing its linearity, its concentration on the 'level of message exchange', and on its
absence of a 'structured conception of the different moments [of mass communication] as
a complex structure of relations' (Hall quoted in Nightingale, 199? p. 27). In Hall's view,
media messages are always open and 'polysemic' (i.e., have multiple meanings) and their
interpretation or so-called "decoding" is influenced by the "... context and the culture of
the receivers" McQuail, 2000, p. 56). Different receivers will not interpret a message "as
sent" or "as expressed" and moreover "... meanings and messages are not simply
"transmitted", they are always produced: first by the encoder from the 'raw' material of
everyday life; second, by the audience in relation to its location in other discourses. Each
moment is 'determinative', operating in its own conditions of production" (Storey, 1996,
p. 11).
Moreover, Hall "... argued that the practice of signification through language
establishes maps of cultural meaning which promote the dominance of a ruling-class
ideology, especially by establishing a hegemony. This involves containing subordinate
classes within superstructures of meaning which frame all competing definitions of
reality within the range of a single hegemonic view of things" (McQuail, 2000, p. 307).
Hall proposed that media messages pass through multiple stages (i.e.,
"distinctive moments") of transformation from its origins "... to its reception and
interpretation" (McQuail, 2000, p. 56-57). In stage one, the "meaningful discourse" is
6. 6
encoded or "framed" based upon the "meaning structure of the mass media production
organization and its main supports" (McQuail, 2000, p. 57). At the point of "encoding",
many ways of looking at the world (i.e., "ideologies") are "in dominance". However,
the media institutions' frameworks of meaning are apt to conform to the dominant power
structures. In Hall's words "[The moment of media production] is framed throughout by
meanings and ideas; knowledge-in-use concerning the routines of production, historically
defined technical skills, professional ideologies, institutional knowledge, definitions and
assumptions, assumptions about the audience" (Hall quoted in Storey, 1996, p. 10).
Individual messages are often "encoded" in the form of established genres (e.g.,
soap operas, news) that "... have a face-value meaning and in-built guidelines for
interpretation by an audience" (McQuail, 2000, p. 57) and therefore represent the
"preferred readings".
During the second stage, as the meanings and messages are in the form of
meaningful discourse (i.e., Hall refers to a television program or any equivalent media
text as "meaningful discourse"), the formal rules of language and discourse are "in
dominance".
At the concluding stage, the "meaningful discourse" is subsequently decoded "...
according to the different meaning structures and frameworks of knowledge of differently
situated audiences" (McQuail, 2000, p. 57). Consequently, decoding involves yet another
range of ideologies "in dominance".
Moments of encoding and decoding may not be perfectly symmetrical (Storey,
1996, p. 11) and more importantly decoding can take a "different turn" than
intended by the encoders. In other words, the meaning as decoded by an audience
7. 7
member doesn't necessarily correspond with the meaning of the message as encoded
despite shared language and use of genres. In this scenario, audience members can "read
between the lines" and in some instances "... reverse the intended direction of the
message" (McQuail, 2000, p. 57).
According to Hall the "media text" is located between its producers and the
audience who "decodes" the text in a manner that may be related to specific social
situations (Dutton, 1997, p. 116)
Hall suggests that there are "three hypothetical positions from which decodings of
televisual discourse may be constructed" (Hall quoted in Storey, 1996, p. 12) ("Codes are
systems of meaning whose rules and conventions are shared by members of a culture or
by what has been called an "interpretative community"-- McQuail, 2000, p. 350). In the
dominant-hegemonic position the viewer decodes a media message "... in terms of the
reference code in which it has been encoded" and is therefore "operating inside the
dominant code" (Storey, 1996, p. 12). In the negotiated code or position the privileged
position is accorded to the dominant definitions of events while reserving the right to
make a more negotiated application to 'local conditions', to its own corporate positions. In
other words, the code "operates with exceptions to the rule". Finally, the oppositional
code represents the viewer who recognizes the "preferred reading" but can "read between
the lines" of official versions of events and therefore chooses to "... decode within an
alternative frame of reference" (McQuail, 2000, p. 98; Storey, 1996, p. 13).
Strengths of the Encoding/Decoding Model
The encoding/decoding model offers an alternative version of the 'active audience'
ideas based in empirical media-effect research (McQuail, 2000, p. 50). In McQuail's
8. 8
words "While early effect research recognized the fact of selective perception, this was
seen as a limitation on, or a condition of, the transmission model, rather than part of a
quite different perspective" (McQuail, 2000, p. 57). In addition, the model
"... situated structures of production, text, and audience (reception) within a framework
where each could be read, registered and analysed in relation to each other" (Nightingale,
199?, p. 22). Moreover, the model also drew attention to genre-based research
(Nightingale 199?, p. 23) and "... generated renewed interest in the relevance for
media research of socio-linguistics and social semiotics" (Nightingale, 199?, p. 23). It
also combined research methods and genres in new ways (Nightingale, 199?, p. 23) as
well softening the boundary previously separating "... text from audience as research
objects" (Nightingale, 199?, p. 23).
Morley's Application of Hall's Model
David Morley, a colleague of Hall's, set out to test the encoding/decoding model
by examining the potential for "differential decoding" by groups from differing
socio-cultural backgrounds. Morley arranged for 29 different groups of 5-10 individuals
each to view one of two episodes of Nationwide, a BBC weekday current affairs news
magazine. The groups were selected on the basis that they "... might be expected to differ
in their decodings from 'dominant' to 'negotiated' to 'oppositional'. The groups tending
towards a dominant reading (i.e., those seen by Morley as closest to Nationwide's own
values) included bank managers and apprentices, while those rejecting Nationwide and
producing an oppositional reading included black further education students and shop
stewards. In between (having a "negotiated" reading) were teacher training and
university students and trade union officials" (Dutton, 1997, p. 116-117).
9. 9
Following the viewing of the Nationwide episodes, each group was interviewed
and their "readings" analyzed. Overall, Morley's study seemed to confirm Hall's
suppositions (Storey, 1996, p. 15) with one notable exception. The middle-class bank
managers and working-class apprentices both produced dominant readings thus bringing
into question the correlation between class and reading position. Morley accounted for
this unexpected outcome by asserting that decoding is not solely determined by class
position but rather "social position plus particular discourse positions" (Storey, 1996, p.
16).
Several years after the Nationwide study, Morley conducted an ethnographic
study of family viewing. This subsequent study, once again largely premised on Hall's
theory "... emphasized the many unwritten rules, understandings and patterns of
behaviour that develop in the micro-audience environment of even one family"
(McQuail, 2000, p. 399). Morley's More Recent Views About the Theory
Cautions against over-emphasis upon the degree of "differential and oppositional reading
of media texts" (McQuail, 2000, p. 99)
The overall impact of Morley's work is somewhat in question. However, indirectly, the
the theory "... proved very effective in 're-empowering' the audience and returning some
optimism to the study of media and culture" (McQuail, 2000, p. 98-99). It also "... led to
a wider view of the social and cultural influences which mediate the experience of the
media, especially ethnicity, gender and 'everyday life'" (McQuail, 2000, p. 99).
Criticisms of the Encoding/Decoding Model
The encoding/decoding model has been criticized on a number of points including
its ideological grounding, definitional ambiguities and gaps as well as
10. 10
oversimplifications.
Several major criticisms of the encoding/decoding model relate to the model's
strong ideological undercurrents. As Nightingale points out, the theory failed to "...
explore its own ideological stance or potentially politically exploitative methods"
(Nightingale, 199?, p. 22). He further states that "... the expedient use of research
methods to suit the genres of cultural production combined in the project overlooked the
political assumptions inherent in the practice of research, and the hierarchical structure
necessitated by the research method" and therefore compromised its goal to "... produce
an audience generated aesthetic" (Nightingale, 199?, p. 23) Other critics also point to the
'overtly political' aspects of decoding positions (Wren-Lewis, 1983, p. 188) and the
model's assumption that television only reproduces the ideas of "dominant culture"
(Nightingale, 199?, p. 24).
A second line of criticism of the encoding/decoding model revolves around the
issue of definitional ambiguities and gaps. For example, the "... lack of specificity about
the ways in which the term 'code' is used (Nightingale, 199?, p. 34) and the overall
undertheorization of "decoding".
Oversimplification is also often cited as an inherent problem of the
encoding/decoding model (Nightingale, 199?, p. 22). This includes the model's
underestimation of "... the contribution of sound, sound effects and music in the
construction of televisual discourse, as well as the interaction between visual and aural
codes" (Nightingale, 199?, p. 33). It has also been argued that the model may overstate
the importance of the media. As Tomlinson offers "For all its evidential problems,
audience research does suggest that the media cannot have the undisputed managerial
11. 11
function that Hall implies, since media messages are themselves mediated by other
modes of cultural experience: this is what is implied by the notion of the "active
audience" (Tomlinson, 1991, p. 61). Moreover, it is suggested that the encoding/decoding
model's "... focus on text/audience, however, leaves out many mediations that should be
part of cultural studies, including analyses of how texts are produced within the context
of the political economy and system of production of culture ..." (Kellner, 1995, p. 37).
Finally, some critics also stress that the model's approach to a television program as
'work' rather than 'text', fails to account for issues of "pleasure" and its possible
effects on the process (Nightingale, 199?, p. 34)
For his part, Hall has acknowledged that the hypothetical decoding positions
required empirical testing and refinement (Storey, 1996, p. 14) among other things in
order for practical application.
Bridging the Gap Between Social-Behavioral & Critical Cultural Approach to Mass
Communication Research
Rather than casting off Hall's encoding/decoding model due to its problematic
nature, a number of scholars have heeded Hall's advice by working to refine the original
theory and use it as a basis for empirical research. In recent years, there has been an
evolution wherein some critical researchers now integrate social scientific methods into
their research endeavors thus somewhat easing the longstanding chasm between the
socio-behavioral and critical cultural approaches to communication research. Some
notable research efforts that have at least partially incorporated Hall's notions include
John Fiske's examination of the different readings of the products of popular culture,
Ien Ang's cross-cultural study of Dallas as well as various studies on soap operas (e.g.,
12. 12
Brunsdon) and science fiction fandoms. Even given its deficiencies, Hall's theory helps
bring to light several important aspects of communication that previous theories gave
insufficient or even no notice. These aspects include the multiplicity of meanings of
media content, the varied "interpretative communities", and the primacy of the receiver
(the "audience") in determining meaning.
13. 13
Works Cited and/or Consulted
Dutton, B. (1997). The Media (2nd ed). Essex, England: Longman.
Hall, S. (1992). Cultural studies and its theoretical legacies. In Grossberg, L., Nelson, C.,
& Treichler, P. A. (Eds.). New York: Routledge. Title?
Hall, S. (1993). Encoding, decoding. In S. During (Ed.), The Cultural studies reader.
London: Routledge.
Hartley, J. (1999). Uses of television. London: Routledge.
Kellner, D. (1995). Media culture: Cultural studies, identity and politics between the
modern and the postmodern. London: Routledge.
Lembo, R. (1994). Is there culture after cultural studies? In J. Cruz, & Lewis, J. Viewing,
reading, listening: Audiences and cultural reception, pp. 33-54. Boulder: Westview
Press.
Littlejohn, S. W. (1989). Theories of human communication. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Nightingale, V. (199?). Studying audiences. London: Routledge.
Sardar, Z., & Van Loon, B. (1997). Introducing cultural studies. New York: Totem
Books.
Tomlinson, J. (1991). Cultural imperialism: A Critical introduction. London: Pinter
Publishers.