2. What does Genre mean?
Genre can be defined as a way of categorising a particular media
text according to its content and style
Tom Ryall (1978)- Genre provides a framework of structuring rules,
in the shape of patterns, forms, styles and structures, which acts as
a form of ‘supervision’ over the work of production of filmmakers
and the work of reading by the audience
3. Tom Ryall’s Genre theory
Tom Ryall’s theory suggests that the types of conventions found in
genres can be grouped within four different categories such as:
Iconography ( symbolic forms associated with the genre )
Narrative ( structure, open/closed)
Representations ( characters and stereotypes)
Ideology (beliefs, overall ideas and themes).
4. Tom Ryall’s Triangle
Steve Neale said that, Genres are not seen as forms of textual codifications but
between industry, text and subject. Tom Ryall agreed with the idea of genre being
“between industry, text and subject” and developed this model as a way of
analysing genre, claiming that you cannot watch a film without considering these
elements
5. Tom Ryall contends that some genres such as horror, comedy
or thrillers may be better conceptualised considering their
effects on the audience for example how they make the
audience feel.
Tom Ryall also provides a list of the categories that he considers
to be proper genres ( westerns, gangster films, musicals, horror
films, thrillers, comedies, melodramas and women's films )