Television
What's on, Who's Watching, and What it Means
- 1st Edition - March 15, 1999
- Latest edition
- Authors: George Comstock, Erica Scharrer
- Language: English
Television: What's On, Who's Watching, and What It Means presents a comprehensive examination of the role of television in one's life. The emphasis is on data collected over the pa… Read more
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Description
Description
Key features
Key features
- Incorporates social psychology, political science, sociology, child development, and the growing field of communications
- Presents tables and graphs clarifying theories and linking sets of data
- Paints concise portraits of the role of television in entertainment, politics, and child-rearing
- Contains background for dozens of lectures and articles
- Contains a comprehensive bibliography of more than 1000 citations, many recent
Readership
Readership
Table of contents
Table of contents
The Industry and the Audience
Three Eras. The Main Means. Assembled to Monitor
Manufacturing the World
Decisions, Stories, and Viewers
The Political Medium
Public Thought and Action
Of Time and Content
Scholastic Performance
Antisocial Behavior
Review quotes
Review quotes
"The renewed debate about media violence makes this comprehensive survey of empirical research on television viewers, content, and effect particularly timely...Highly recommended for all collections."—CHOICE, October 1999
"This volume belongs on the bookshelf of all serious media researchers."—JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY
"George Comstock and his former graduate student, Erica Scharrer, examine an impressive array of studies (more than 1,100 are cited) in an attempt to describe the content of TV and to synthesize knowledge about people's uses of TV and the micro- and macroeffects of TV viewing. Comstock is the right person to take on this challenge. During the past quarter century, he has established himself as one of the leading scholars on the influence of TV in American life...the authors...make a significant contribution to an understanding of the role and impact of TV in our lives...the authors do a fine job of distilling and making sense out of the array of often conflicting studies about the content of TV and its effects...The book offers an excellent synthesis of social science research on TV: the essentials about TV—its content, uses, and effects. I recommend the book to all psychologists who are interested in the nature and effects of TV in contemporary America."—CONTEMPORARY PSYCHOLOGY, Vol. 45, 2000
Product details
Product details
- Edition: 1
- Latest edition
- Published: March 15, 1999
- Language: English
About the authors
About the authors
GC
George Comstock
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