Available Formats
The Practical Media Dictionary
By (Author) Jeremy Orlebar
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hodder Arnold
7th August 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Reference works
302.2303
Paperback
288
Width 155mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
Whether you are creating a poster with a desktop publishing package, making an animated film, working with computer-generated graphics or producing a sophisticated drama on digital video, virtually all media and multimedia courses will have elements of practical work. The difficulty for students and new entrants to the industry is that the day-to-day working language, the customised roles and the specific deployment of skills and specialist activities can seem at first daunting and impenetrable. "The Practical Media Dictionary" is an essential guide to understanding how the media works and how people in the media talk to each other about their industry. It makes the media accessible. It untangles the jargon, and provides you with the knowledge to participate in the production of practical media products. The definitions are clear, uncomplicated and easy to understand relying on very little previous media knowledge. Technical terms are fully explained in everyday language. It includes specialist jargon found in a TV studio, and on location. It includes features such as: The vocabulary of radio production; terms used in multimedia; specialist language of film production; comprehensive job and skills definitions; and frequently accessed organisations associated with practical media production. If you are studying or starting work in the media, this dictionary is an essential companion and a comprehensive guide to successful and practical media production.
Overall, this is an unpretentious quick-reference work giving clear and uncomplicated definitions of around 1,000 of the words and phrases commonly used in the media production industry, and ideally suited to its audience. * Reference Reviews *
Jeremy Orlebar is a producer, director, writer and lecturer. He has over 25 years experience directing and producing programmes for BBC radio and televsion and now runs his own production company. He lectures in media theory and production in higher education.