Faces of Televisual Media

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act
Annenberg Public Policy Center
Blue's Clues
Blue’s Clues
Cartoon Network
CARU
Category=ATJ
Category=JBCT
child media psychology
Child's Tv
children's
Children's Advertising
Children's Television
Children’s Advertising
Children’s Television
Child’s Tv
Commercial Messages
cross-cultural media studies
der
developmental media impact
educational programming analysis
enhance
Enhanced Television
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
game
General Audience Programs
General's Scientific Advisory Committee
General’s Scientific Advisory Committee
Heavy Viewers
Interactive Program Guide
media effects research
media influence on child cognition
Media Violence
Personal Video Recorder
Persuasive Intent
Prosocial Content
regulatory policy media
Saturday Morning Children's Programs
Saturday Morning Children’s Programs
Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory
Surgeon General’s Scientific Advisory
television
Television Violence
Televisual Media
Tv Advertising
Tv Commercial
Tv Violence
van
Van Der Voort
video
violence
voort

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805840759
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2003
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This collection offers original, state-of-the-art contributions from leading authorities in children's televisual media. International researchers from communication and psychology provide readers with ready access to current televisual research, trends, and policymaking/political climate issues pertaining to children. This second edition provides a current summary of studies on content, viewing patterns, comprehension, effects, and individual differences in instructional and educational programming, televisual entertainment and violence programming, and televisual advertising to children.

Editors Edward L. Palmer and Brian M. Young have structured the volume into three sections examining the "faces" of television: the Teaching (instructional/educational) Face, the Violent Face, and the Selling (advertising) Face. Chapters within each section identify and focus recurrent themes while integrating them topically into a coherent whole. Each area incorporates new technologies and considers their potentials, effects, and future. Subjects featured in the various chapters include:
*cross-cultural and historical comparisons with an in-depth perspective on the BBC and other European/Asian televisual media roots, as well as America's formative televisual media roots;
*an examination of key differences between developed and developing countries;
*implications of emerging instructional/educational media for children's education--addressing both cognitive and multi-ethnic aspects; and
* prominent, informed challenge to the prevailing popular view that children are unaffected and unharmed by exposure to media violence.

This volume informs ongoing debates across a broad spectrum of current, critical issues, and suggests avenues for future research. It is pertinent and provocative for the most sophisticated scholar in the field, as well as for students in areas of developmental or social psychology, communication, education, sociology, marketing, broadcasting and film, public policy, advertising, and medicine/pediatrics. It is also appropriate for courses in children, media, and society.

Edward L. Palmer (Edited by) ,  Brian M. Young (Edited by