John Fiske (media scholar)

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John Fiske (born September 12, 1939 in Bristol, England, died July 12, 2021)[1] was a media scholar and cultural theorist who taught around the world. His primary areas of intellectual interest included cultural studies, critical analysis of popular culture, media semiotics, and television studies.[2]

He was the author of eight academic books, including Power Plays, Power Works (1993), Understanding Popular Culture (1989), Reading the Popular (1989), and the influential Television Culture (1987). Fiske was also a media critic, examining how cultural meaning has been created in American society, and how debates over issues such as race have been handled in different media.

Careers[]

Fiske was born and educated in Britain. He received a BA (Honors) and MA in English Literature from Cambridge University, where he studied under the renowned leftist literary and cultural critic and activist Raymond Williams, who influenced Fiske's intellectual thinking throughout his life. While at Cambridge, he was a member of the Cambridge Footlights amateur dramatic club as a peer of several of Monty Python's founding members.[1]

After graduating from Cambridge University, he taught in the United Kingdom and throughout the world including Australia, New Zealand and the United States. Positions he held included:

  • Principal Lecturer at Sheffield Polytechnic, where he designed the first undergraduate degree in Communication in the United Kingdom
  • Principal Lecturer in Communication at the Polytechnic of Wales, where he supervised the first Ph.D. candidate in Communication in the United Kingdom
  • Principal Lecturer in the School of Communication and Cultural Studies at Curtin University in Perth, Australia
  • Professor of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, from which he retired

While living in Perth, Australia, during the 1980s and early 1990s, he was the general editor of the academic journal Cultural Studies while he taught at Western Australian Institute of Technology (known as Curtin University as of 1986). He was a Professor of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin–Madison for 12 years.[3]

John Fiske retired from academia in 2000 and settled in Vermont, where he began a second career as an antiques dealer trading as Fiske & Freeman: Fine and Early Antiques. His specialty was seventeenth-century English oak furniture. He was the editor-in-chief of and founding publisher of the online Digital Antiques Journal.

Fiske published several books on seventeenth-century furniture including Living with Early Oak and When Oak Was New.[1]

Honors[]

In 2000, Fiske was granted emeritus status by University of Wisconsin–Madison as a Professor of Letters and Science/Communication Arts after having taught at the University for 12 years.[3] In May 2008, Fiske received an Honorary Doctoral Degree from the University of Antwerp.

Theory[]

Semiotics and television studies[]

Fiske was one of the first scholars to apply semiotics to media texts following the tradition of poststructuralism, and coined the term semiotic democracy.[citation needed]

He is the author of works on television studies regarding popular culture and mass media. Fiske's books analyze television shows as semiotic "texts" in order to examine the different layers of meaning and sociocultural content. Fiske rejects the notion that assumes "the audience" as an uncritical mass, the theory that mass audiences consume the products that are offered to them without thought. He instead suggests "audiences" as being of various social backgrounds and identities that enable them to receive texts differently.

Fiske's 1987 textbook on television, Television Culture, introduces the subject of television studies by examining the economic and cultural issues, as well as the theory and text-based criticism, involving television. It also provides an overview of the arguments by British, American, Australian, and French scholars. It was "one of the first books about television to take seriously the feminist agenda that has been so important to the recent development of the field."[4]

Power[]

In Power Plays, Power Works (1993), Fiske argues that power "is a systematic set of operations upon people that works to ensure the maintenance of the social order…and ensure its smooth running."[5]

Through the book, Fiske coined the term "power bloc" in reference to the social and political economic constructs around which power functions in the contemporary Western world.[6] Rather than constituting a particular class or permanently-defined socio-political group, power blocs are unsystematic series of both strategic and tactical political alliances. These constantly-changing partnerships form whenever circumstances emerge that jeopardize the socio-political advantages of the members involved. They therefore arise and separate on an ad hoc basis (i.e., depending on the necessities of the moment), and their alliance is specific to matters of social, cultural, historic, and/or imminent relevance.[6]

Those who fall outside of the bloc—and fall under its "authority"—can be understood as the notion of "the people." Such people may still possess power of their own, however it is a weaker power—what Fiske refers to as a "localizing power".[6]

In Understanding Popular Culture (1989), Fiske maintains that culture is integral to social power:[7]

Culture (and its meanings and pleasures) is a constant succession of social practices; it is therefore inherently political, it is centrally involved in the distribution and possible redistribution of various forms of social power.

Bibliography[]

  • 1978. Reading Television, with John Hartley. London: Methuen & Co. ISBN 0-415-04291-7.
  • 1982. Introduction to Communication Studies, Studies in Culture and Communication. ISBN 0-415-04672-6.
  • 1984. "Popularity and Ideology: A Structuralist Reading of Dr Who." In Interpreting Television: Current Research Perspectives, edited by W. D. Rowland Jr. and B. Watkins.[8]
  • 1987. Television Culture, Studies in Communication Series. London: Methuen & Co. ISBN 0-415-03934-7.
  • 1989. Reading the Popular. London: Unwin Hyman Ltd. ISBN 978-0-415-07875-7.
  • 1989. Understanding Popular Culture. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-07876-4.
  • 1992. "British Cultural Studies and Television." In Channels of Discourse, Reassembled, edited by R. C. Allen. ISBN 978-0-8078-4374-1.
  • 1994. Media Matters: Everyday Culture and Political Change. Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press. ISBN 9780816624621.
  • 1993. Power Plays, Power Works. ISBN 0-86091-616-2
  • 1996. Media Matters: Race and Gender in U.S. Politics. ISBN 978-0-8166-2463-8.

Interviews and lectures[]

  • 1990/1991. "An Interview with John Fiske." Border/Lines 20/21(Winter):4–7.
  • 2000. "Interview with John Fiske," with Mick O'Regan. The Media Report. Australia: ABC Radio National.
  • 2000. "'Surveillance and the self: Some issues for cultural studies'" (lecture), Television: Past, Present, and Future.[9]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "In Memoriam". Fiske & Freeman: Early English Oak Furniture and Accessories. Retrieved 2021-07-17.
  2. ^ Duvall, Spring-Serenity. 2012. "Fiske, John." Pp. 120–21 in Encyclopedia of Gender in Media, edited by M. Kosut. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications. doi:10.4135/9781452218540.n51.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Faculty and academic staff granted emeritus/emerita status in 2000-01." UWMadison News. University of Wisconsin–Madison. 2000 August 29.
  4. ^ "Television studies." Museum of Broadcast Communications. 2013.
  5. ^ Fiske, John. 1993. Power Plays, Power Works. ISBN 0-86091-616-2. p. 11.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Kincheloe, Joe L. 2008. "Questions of Power and Knowledge. In Knowledge and Critical Pedagogy." Ch. 5 in Explorations of Educational Purpose 1, edited by J. L. Kincheloe. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-8224-5_5. p. 97.
  7. ^ Fiske, John. 1989. Understanding Popular Culture. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-07876-4. p. 1.
  8. ^ "John Fiske: Popularity & Ideology: A Structuralist Reading of Dr Who," Making Doctor Who Mean. Speaker to Animals.
  9. ^ "'Surveillance and the self: Some issues for cultural studies'," Television: Past, Present, and Future. Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies, The University of Queensland. 2000.

Further reading[]

External links[]

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