There are two types of communication models discussed in chapter one, the first model is the transmission model. This model is based on the fact that transportation plays a vital role in our ability to communicate and interact with one anther. The Transmission model is the more prevalent model of communication in society today.
- "Communication is the process of moving messages from a sender through a medium to a receiver."
- Source -> Message -> Receiver
- Who/says What/to Whom/through what Channel/and with what Effect?
The Cultural Model
The second model of communication is the cultural model. The cultural model of communication draws ties between the process of communication and our culture. Culture is one of the most complex yet powerful concepts in modern thinking. Raymond Williams has traced the changing meaning of this term:
- "Culture was not a response to the new methods of production, the new Industry alone. It was concerned, beyond these, with the new kinds of personal and social relationships: again, both as a recognition of practical separation and as an emphasis of alternatives."
The September 11, 2001 attacks on the world trade centers is used as an example to contrast the two models because both of them, the transmission model and the cultural model, are used in our means of communication when this day is being discussed. We have what we all saw on the television screen that day, but we also have our own personal beliefs on why this happened and what caused this to happen.
