Hermeneutic theory: Malaysian practices

Hermeneutic philosophy and phenomenology are advanced in the Handbook of Media and Communication Research as being two of four `main traditions' shaping media and communication studies. Informed by hermeneutic scholarship, `ready-to-hand' (Heidegger) habitual media user practices become a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wilson, Tony
Format: Article
Published: Taylor & Francis 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/41774/
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Summary:Hermeneutic philosophy and phenomenology are advanced in the Handbook of Media and Communication Research as being two of four `main traditions' shaping media and communication studies. Informed by hermeneutic scholarship, `ready-to-hand' (Heidegger) habitual media user practices become a central focus. Drawing on Gadamer's hermeneutic thought positions agent practices within perspective or a tacit hermeneutic representational `horizon of understanding'. Ricoeur showed subsequently that culturally hegemonic horizons of understanding can be perceived from `distanciated' (Ricoeur) positions, viewed as powerful bearers of ideology, a political `moment'. In this paper's reflecting on approaches to mediated practices, hermeneutic phenomenology underwrites the discussion of Malaysian multicultural research as instantiating exemplar. In a first section, the philosophy involved with a practices analysis is outlined in discussing phenomenology and media studies. The second section considers media research situating practices within horizons of representational understanding, digitally, institutionally and also constituted within `figurations'. A final section sees hermeneutic practices as a tacit presence in Malaysian multi-cultural activity: mall visiting and media viewing, responses to advertising and identity defining religious occasion.