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Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Dec 15, 2015

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Kiya Gipson
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Page 1: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Understanding Genre

as an aspect of discourse

Page 2: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

At face value,

genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Page 3: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

From the French word for “type”, we all know that genre simply refers to a type of text.

Page 4: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The adjective form of genre is “generic,” a word that has come to have its own meaning.We have come to use “generic” to mean “no-name” or lacking a brand.

But this generic beer can help us understand genre, too. This can will contain a carbonatedbeverage made from fermented hops and grain that should deliver a mild buzz. At least we expect it to.

If the product above is flat, fruity, or milky, it will disappoint us.It would fail to satisfy our generic expectations.

Page 5: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Think about the floor plan of a Blockbuster, with shelves arranged into categories like Comedy, Sci-Fi, Horror, and Action.

Movies are commonly categorized into genres.

Page 6: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Audiences use genre to decide what kind of movieto see.

Page 7: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

What about funnyhorror movies, like Drag Me to Hell or Fright Night? What about historical dramatic romances, like Titanic? Where do you shelve those?

But sometimes simple genre distinctionsdon’t prove very useful.

Page 8: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Genre is a contract of sorts between composer and reader.

We can feel cheated if the text does not fulfill our generic expectations, just as we would be angered at finding that our can of generic beer actually contained a strawberry milkshake.

Page 9: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The 1996 film From Dusk Till Dawnis an example of a film that commitsa kind of breach of the generic contract.

One critic called it "an ugly, unpleasant criminals-on-the-lam film that midway turns into a boring and completely repellent vampire 'comedy.' If it's not one of the worst films of 1996 it will have been one miserable year."

It’s interesting to note, however, that in recent years, the movie has developed cult status. Perhaps as audiences become more sophisticated, we have become more accepting of violationsof the genre contract.

Page 10: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

But is it agenre at all?

Page 11: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

GroupingsGroupings contribute to our associations and

expectations of genre. Movies, for instance, can be grouped by period or

country (American films of the 1930s), by director or star or producer (Woody Allen movies, John Waters

films), by technical process (Pixar films, 3D), by series (the 007 movies), by style (cinema verite), by structure (narrative), by budget (indie cinema, blockbusters), by venue ('drive-in movies'), by purpose (home movies,

propaganda films), by audience ('teenpix'), by subject or theme (war movies, underdog movies).

All of these groupings carry a set of expectations and associations—in other words, groupings can function as

genres.

Page 12: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Think of a text like “The Meatrix.”

http://youtu.be/hChq5drjQl4

Page 13: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

A viral video? A cartoon?

A short documentary?Propaganda?

A parody of The Matrix?

Yes.

So, what genre is The Meatrix?

Page 14: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The Meatrix is a viral video because of how it was disseminated and its popularity.

According to its website, “When The Meatrix launched in November 2003, the viral film broke new ground in online grassroots advocacy, creating a unique vehicle by which to educate, entertain and motivate people to create change. The Meatrix movies, now a series, have been translated into more than 30 languages and are one of the most successful online advocacy campaigns ever – with well over 15 million viewers worldwide.”

Page 15: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

What do we expect a viral video to be like? •Brief? •Funny? Shocking? Bizarre?•Amateurish or highly stylized?

Page 16: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

We know it’s an animated cartoon, because we see immediately that the images are hand-drawn, or are meant to appear hand-drawn.

How do we expect cartoons to “behave”? Where do our expectations come from?

What happens when cartoons DON’T behave the way we expect?

Page 17: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Why would the creators of The Meatrix want to use flash or cartoonish animation to spread their message of sustainable agriculture?

Think about other texts that sharesimilar purposes to The Meatrix.

Page 18: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The most well-known anti-cruelty activism campaign is probably P.E.T.A. Though they share a common purpose, a PETA short video, “Chew on This” employs very different strategies.

View the video below.

Page 19: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Free Range Studios seems to deliberately avoid PETA’s infamous shock-and-disgusttactics.

Instead of guilt, The Meatrix uses comedy and parody to appeal to its audience.

What audience is targeted?

Does Free Range studios expect you to compare their text to PETA’s? Has PETA invented its own genre of activism?

Page 20: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

It really depends on the audience.

Page 21: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

There couldbe as manyways ofcategorizingtextsas there arecritics or readers.

Page 22: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The important thing to remember about genre is that it is fluid.Genre depends on the rhetorical situation—the context, the purpose, the audience’s expectations, and the strategies the author/creator employs.

Genre, in a way, sets up the parameters of the relationship between the creator of the text and the reader.

Page 23: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

author’s purpose

audience’s

expectations

genre

The author’s intentions work with and against the knowledge and attitudes that

the audience brings to the text.

Page 24: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

Audiences recognize genres by their adherence to conventions and tropes—recurring rhetorical devices, such as the ones satirized in this video …Enjoy!

Your Text Here

Trailer for Every Oscar-Winning Movie Ever

Page 25: Understanding Genre as an aspect of discourse. At face value, genre doesn’t seem to be a very tricky concept at all.

The End