How Television Shapes Our Worldview

How Television Shapes Our Worldview
Nicht lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Nicht lieferbar I

195,90 €*

Alle Preise inkl. MwSt. | Versandkostenfrei
Artikel-Nr:
9780739187043
Seiten:
0
Gewicht:
879 g
Format:
235x157x31 mm
Beschreibung:

Deborah A. Macey is visiting assistant professor at Saint Louis University.Kathleen M. Ryan is associate professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder and an active multimedia director and producer.Noah J. Springer is a PhD student at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Despite the fractured media scape and ideological distortions, the voice from television offers important lessons and ways to understand who we are as humans and how we interact with others, both locally and globally. This book offers a global perspective on how television shapes our perception of the world.
1. IntroductionDeborah A. Macey, Kathleen M. Ryan and Noah J. SpringerSection I: Not Necessarily the News2. A Bigger Screen for a Narrower ViewJack A. Barwind, Philip J. Salem, and Robert D. Gratz3. Measuring the Messenger: Analyzing Bias in Presidential Election Return CoverageKahtleen M. Ryan, Lane Clegg, and Joy C. Mapaye4. Television, Islam, and the Invisible: Narratives on Terrorism and ImmigrationTim KarisSection II: Boy (and Girl) Meets World5. "Your Dreams Were Your Ticket Out:" How Mass Media's Teachers Constructed One Educator's IdentityEdward A. Janak6. Defying Gravity: Fox's Glee Provides a Forum for Queer Teen RepresentationKatherine J. Lehman7. Friendship and the Single Girl: What We Learned about Feminism and Friendship from Sitcom Women in the 1960s and 1970sCindy Conaway and Peggy TallySection III: America's Most Wanted8. Epic Failures: Media Framing and the Ethics of Scapegoating in BaseballChandler Harris and Lauren Lemley9. Eyewitnesses to TV Versions of Reality: The Relationship between Exposure to TV Crime Dramas and Perceptions of the Criminal Justice SystemSusan H. Sarapin and Glenn G. Sparks10. Paramilitary Patriots of the Cold War: Women, Weapons, and Private Warriors in The A-Team and AirwolfCharity FoxSection IV: The More You Know11. Lisa and Phoebe, Lone Vegetarian Icons: At Odds with Television's CarnonormativityCarrie Packwood Freeman12. Television and the Environment: More Screen-Less GreenJennifer Ellen Good13. From Welby to McDreamy: What TV Teaches Us About Doctors, Patients, and the Health Care SystemKatherine A. FossSection V: The Voice14. Made Impossible by Viewers Like You: The Politics and Poetics of Native American Voices in US Public TelevisionLeighton C. Peterson15. "Real" Black, "Real" Money: African American Audiences on The Real Housewives of AtlantaGretta Moody16. He Who has the Gold Makes the Rules: Tyler Perry Presents "The Tyler Perry Way"Danielle E. Williams17. Viewing 90210 from 12203: Affluent TV Teens Influence a Cohort of Middle Class WomenMichelle Napierski-PranclSection VI: Futurama18. The Construction of Taste: Television and American Home DécorStylés I. Akira and Larry Ossei-Mensah19. Bordertown: Manufacturing Mexicanness in Reality TelevisionAriadne Alejandra Gonzalez20. Cyborgs in the Newsroom: Databases, Cynicism and Political Irony in The Daily ShowNoah J. Springer

Kunden Rezensionen

Zu diesem Artikel ist noch keine Rezension vorhanden.
Helfen sie anderen Besuchern und verfassen Sie selbst eine Rezension.