Amazon.com: Kids' Media Culture (Console-ing Passions) (9780822323716): Marsha Kinder, Ellen Seiter, Heather Gilmour, Yasmin Kafai, Karen Vered: Books

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Kids' Media Culture (Console-ing Passions) [Paperback]

Marsha Kinder (Contributor), Ellen Seiter (Contributor), Heather Gilmour (Contributor), Yasmin Kafai (Contributor), Karen Vered (Contributor)

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Book Description

December 30, 1999 Console-ing Passions
Television shows, comic strips, video games, and other forms of media directed at children are the subject of frequent and rancorous debate. In Kids’ Media Culture some of the most prominent cultural theorists of children’s media join forces with exciting new voices in the field to consider the production and consumption of media aimed at children. What’s good for kids and what’s merely exploitive? Are shows that attempt to level the socioeconomic playing field by educating children effective? The essays in this anthology tackle these questions and pose provocative new questions of their own.
As part of their argument that children’s reactions to mass media are far more complex and dynamic than previously thought, contributors examine the rise of mass media in postwar America. They explore how books, cartoons, and television shows of the 1950s and 1960s—such as Lassie and Dennis the Menace—helped redefine American identity and export an image of a particularly American optimism and innocence worldwide. Other essays take up the controversies surrounding such shows as Sesame Street, My So-Called Life, and Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. After discussing the differences in how children and adults react to such programs, the collection focuses on television in schools and the ways that mass media convey messages about gender and socialization.
Kids’ Media Culture makes clear that children are active, engaged participants in the media culture surrounding them. This volume will be compelling reading for those interested in television and cultural studies as well as anyone interested in children’s education and welfare.

Contributors
. Heather Gilmour, Sean Griffin, Heather Hendershot, Henry Jenkins, Yasmin B. Kafai, Jyotsna Kapur, Marsha Kinder, Susan Murray, Elissa Rashkin, Ellen Seiter, Lynn Spigel, Karen Orr Vered

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Editorial Reviews

From Kirkus Reviews

paper 0-8223-2371-0 A collection of research-oriented essays by media scholars centering on mass media directed at children, especially television programs, movies, computer games, and comic strips. Editor Kinder (Cinema-Television, Univ. of Southern California; Playing with Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games, 1991), who is also author of one of the essays, has selected 11 other contributors who share her assumption that attention should be shifted away from fighting violence and pornography to using mass media to address the needs of children, insuring universal access, and enhancing media literacy. The first section, ``Children's Media Culture in the Postwar Era,'' examines how the comic strips Dennis the Menace and Peanuts, the novel, movie, and television series Lassie, and the Davy Crockett craze helped to define the American identity at home and abroad in the 1950s. The second, ``Reception and Cultural Identity,'' shifts to the 1990s and considers the ways various shows, ranging from the so-called good Sesame Street to the so-called bad X-Men are perceived by adults and children, and what skills children learn from them. Part three, ``Pedagogy and Power,'' focuses on media in preschool and school settings. One study compares attitudes toward television in an upper-middle-class and a low-income daycare center, while two others look at the differences in the way boys and girls interact with computer games. General readers unversed in the jargon of media studies will face tough going. Upon reading that ``the interplay between gender and the use of computers involves a negotiation between established orders and liberatory beliefs and behaviors that challenge convention, parents with questions about how to deal with the powerful influence of television and computers in their child's life are likely to remain bemused. Media specialists writing for other media specialists. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

Kids’ Media Culture is a significant contribution to one of the most important and fastest growing areas of scholarly concern in media and cultural studies—the theory and history of childhood and adolescence. An extremely impressive range of topics are covered: different media and consumption practices, different historical periods, and considerations of the complexities of gender, class, and race.”—Eric Smoodin, author of Animating Culture: Hollywood Cartoons from the Sound Era

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In fall, 1993, President Clinton proclaimed the third Sunday in November as National Children's Day. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
aristocratic majesty, serial imitation, violent feedback, kid strip, morning lineup, national supremacy, foreign versions, girl fans
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sesame Street, New York, Davy Crockett, United States, Los Angeles Times, Power Rangers, Carmen Sandiego, Dennis the Menace, Charlie Brown, Henry Jenkins, Walt Disney, Latin American, Good Grief, Sinai Akiba, Lassie Come Home, Mortal Kombat, Statue of Liberty, World War, America Online, Crockett Craze, Lynn Spigel, Marsha Kinder, Street Fighter, Jacqueline Rose, Mister Rogers
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