Abstract

While many of us have been professionally ensconced in North American colleges and universities, dutifully building and institutionalizing critical film, media, and cultural studies programs over the course of the 1990s, a similar if far more decentralized and loosely coordinated project has been under construction outside the walls of Academe. Serious critical discourse concerning the possible psychological, social, political, and cultural ramifications of the pervasive and ever-expanding mass media has been circulating through primary and secondary school classrooms, community meeting halls, church basements, and public libraries. Informed by a mix of theoretical stances and methodological approaches that must serve a wide and sometimes disparate range of cultural assumptions, ideological positions, and political intentions, these discussions have come to promote both the idea and the practice of some form of media literacy as the necessary response to, if not the inoculation against, the lived experience of media-saturated lives. And at least some of those who are engaged with the creation and dissemination of this media literacy are part of the larger media literacy campaign. This essay is neither a descriptive history nor a critical analysis of the media literacy movement. The bibliography below includes some places to which the reader might turn for such accounts. This essay instead is a tentative consideration of the potential for alignment between the work of this popular movement and the academic/critical media studies project. By way of thinking through a few of my own encounters with the media literacy movement, I want to suggest that it is not best understood as an activist or a popular spin-off of the critical media studies project, as one might at first assume. Instead, many of this movement's central theoretical concerns and operative assumptions echo and provide a contemporary forum for the primarily psychologically and biologically informed threads of mass communication theory and research that so dominated U.S. academic understanding of media, society, and culture in the mid-twentieth century. This scholarship has continued to shape a large portion of traditional mass communication theory since. Thus, the media literacy movement renews and updates the popular concerns over the relationship between mass media and the changing sociocultural norms of 1950s and 1960s America, the so-called mass culture debates. My initial response to discovering the media literacy movement a few years ago as a card-carrying and tenure-tracking member of the critical media studies project was a mixture of surprise, arrogance, and suspicion. Of course, the surprise may have simply been a result of spending a good part of the 1990s teaching a 4-4 course load at a bargain-basement, publicly funded liberal arts college tucked away in the Rocky Mountains of southwestern Colorado. We sometimes came down to the lands below in search of mates, a two-day-old New York Times, and replacement

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