Media language refers to the specialised vocabulary, concepts, and analytical frameworks used to describe, analyse, and evaluate media products and processes. Using appropriate media language is a non-negotiable requirement for VCE Media examinations and is assessed in both written analysis and production documentation.
Using precise media language:
- Demonstrates subject-specific knowledge and understanding
- Enables efficient, unambiguous communication about complex media concepts
- Signals the analytical register expected in academic media discourse
- Positions the writer as a credible analyst rather than a casual viewer
Core Vocabulary by Area
Narrative
- Plot, story, narrative arc, structure, equilibrium, disruption, resolution
- Protagonist, antagonist, focalization, point of view, narrator
- Genre, convention, subversion, intertextuality, hybrid genre
- Linear, non-linear, circular, episodic, fragmented narrative
Production and Technical
- Pre-production, production, post-production
- Shot types: establishing shot, long shot, medium shot, close-up, extreme close-up, over-the-shoulder shot
- Camera movement: pan, tilt, track, dolly, crane, handheld, aerial
- Editing: cut, dissolve, fade, montage, parallel editing, jump cut, match cut
- Lighting: high-key, low-key, three-point lighting, chiaroscuro
- Sound: diegetic, non-diegetic, ambient, score, foley, voice-over
Audience and Reception
- Target audience, actual audience, audience reading, preferred reading
- Dominant reading, negotiated reading, oppositional reading
- Engage, consume, read, decode, interpret
- Audience agency, participatory media, user-generated content
Context and Representation
- Social, historical, cultural, institutional, economic, political context
- Representation, stereotype, archetype, counter-narrative
- Ideology, hegemony, discourse, values and attitudes
- Codes: technical, symbolic, written, audio
- Broadcast, streaming, distribution, circulation, platform
- Media institution, media ownership, convergence, conglomerate
- Regulation, classification, censorship, self-regulation
- Intellectual property, copyright, defamation, privacy
Common Errors to Avoid
| Incorrect Usage |
Correct Media Language |
| “The camera shows…” |
“The use of a [shot type] constructs…” |
| “The director wants the audience to feel…” |
“The [technique] positions the audience to…” |
| “The music is scary” |
“The non-diegetic score creates a sense of tension/dread” |
| “The story is about…” |
“The narrative centres on… / The narrative traces…” |
| “People who watch it” |
“The target audience” or “audiences” |
REMEMBER: The VCAA Study Design specifically requires the use of ‘appropriate media language’ across all areas of study. This means using the correct technical term every time — not paraphrasing around it.
EXAM TIP: Before the exam, compile a personal glossary of 30–40 key media terms with short definitions and one example each. Practise weaving at least 3–4 specific media language terms into every paragraph of a practice essay.