Encoding/Decoding and Audience Readings
Stuart Hall's model that broke with the idea of passive viewers, showing how audiences can decode a media message in the preferred, a negotiated, or an oppositional way.
Definition
Encoding/decoding is Hall's model in which a media message is encoded by producers within dominant codes and then decoded by audiences who may accept the preferred meaning, negotiate it, or read it oppositionally, making meaning the outcome of a contested circuit rather than a simple transmission.
Scope
This topic covers Hall's encoding/decoding model of communication and the active-audience research it inspired, including Morley's empirical study of television viewers and Ang's work on soap-opera audiences. It does not cover the broader Birmingham programme or media-industry analysis.
Core questions
- Do audiences simply receive the meanings producers intend?
- What are dominant, negotiated, and oppositional readings?
- How do social position and context shape decoding?
Key theories
- The encoding/decoding circuit
- Hall argued that production encodes a preferred meaning, but reception is a separate moment in which audiences decode within dominant, negotiated, or oppositional positions.
- The active audience
- Empirical reception studies by Morley and Ang showed that viewers' decodings vary with their social location and pleasures, confirming the audience as active rather than passive.
History
Hall's 1973 paper on television discourse, widely circulated and reprinted, reframed mass communication as a circuit of encoding and decoding with several reading positions. It launched a programme of audience research at Birmingham and beyond, exemplified by Morley's study of the Nationwide television audience and Ang's analysis of Dallas viewers.
Debates
- Resistant readings versus the limits of agency
- Active-audience research is praised for crediting viewers with interpretive agency but also criticised for sometimes overstating resistance and underplaying structural power.
Key figures
- Stuart Hall
- David Morley
- Ien Ang
Related topics
Seminal works
- hall1973
- morley1980
- ang1985
Frequently asked questions
- What is an oppositional reading?
- When an audience understands the preferred meaning of a message but rejects it, reading it within a contrary framework, such as decoding an advertisement as evidence of consumer manipulation.