The audience’s encounter with media codes and narrative conventions is an active, culturally informed process. Audiences do not simply receive codes — they decode them against a background of cultural knowledge, prior media experience, and personal context.
When audiences encounter a media product, they apply media literacy — the capacity to read and interpret media codes — developed through years of media consumption. This enables:
Decoding codes requires cultural competence — shared knowledge between producer and audience. Codes are not universal:
- Western tonal music signals danger or romance to audiences familiar with the Western film tradition; the same music may carry no such connotation for audiences outside that tradition
- Visual symbolism is often culturally specific — the colour white signifies purity and mourning in different cultural contexts
- Genre conventions are legible only to audiences familiar with the genre
This is why media forms developed in one national context often feel ‘strange’ to audiences from other contexts — not because the codes are poor, but because the shared cultural knowledge required to read them is absent.
Cognitive engagement: The intellectual work of following narrative logic, identifying themes, predicting outcomes, and making connections between narrative elements.
Emotional engagement: The affective response produced by codes designed to trigger specific emotions — fear, joy, suspense, grief, humour. Emotional engagement is one of the most powerful hooks for audience attention.
Social engagement: Audiences engage with media narratives as shared social experiences — discussing, debating, and comparing readings with others. Social media has intensified this dimension.
Reflexive engagement: Sophisticated audiences recognise and reflect on the codes and conventions being deployed, reading both the narrative and the construction simultaneously.
Narrative conventions create horizon of expectation — audiences anticipate certain events and outcomes based on genre and structural norms. Producers can:
In Parasite (2019, dir. Bong Joon-ho), the film initially fulfils the conventions of a dark comedy before abruptly shifting register into thriller and horror — the subversion of the audience’s horizon of expectation is central to the film’s impact.
Knowledge of how audiences read codes enables producers to make deliberate choices:
- Selecting codes that reliably trigger the intended emotional response in the target audience
- Deploying conventions that activate prior knowledge and create efficiency of communication
- Strategically withholding information to sustain curiosity and engagement
EXAM TIP: When discussing how audiences are engaged by codes, go beyond description — analyse the mechanism of engagement. Does the code trigger identification, suspense, emotional resonance, surprise? Name the mechanism and link it to the specific code.
APPLICATION: For every production you study or make, practise describing how each major code choice is designed to engage the audience in a specific way. This dual producer/audience perspective is what VCAA examiners are looking for.