This article considers the place of the ‘everyday’ and ‘practice’ in media ethnography and audience research in cultural and media studies as well as this tradition’s relationship to textual analysis. Drawing on an auto-ethnographic study of the author’s family, the research considers the way in which they made meanings with the preschool children’s television programme Teletubbies. The analysis considers how television viewing is regulated discursively across a number of different sites that constitute ‘parenthood’. In this respect, Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of ‘habitus’ is developed to account for the ways in which the textual and discursive address articulates with, develops and reproduces the family’s childcare practices. The research a...
There is no denying that television, as a medium and an institution, has drastically changed in the ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 245-274.Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Literature revi...
Although clearly recognised in broader institutional histories of British children’s television as a...
This article considers the place of the ‘everyday’ and ‘practice’ in media ethnography and audience ...
This article responds to scholarship on Beckett’s television plays that regards them as positive int...
In this thesis I show how the child television audience is imagined and acted upon within an adminis...
This article, drawn from my doctoral research into children’s public service broadcasting (PSB) in t...
In recent studies on children and electronic media, children are acknowledged as active users, inter...
Although the experience of watching television has assumed a position of prime importance, not only ...
This is an ethnographic study of the making of Childhood, a seven-hour documentary series, for publi...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
references, 105 titles. The children’s television program Teletubbies and its concomitant controvers...
The paper deals with the issue of the presence of audio-visual culture in the child’s everyday life ...
This thesis seeks to contribute to a theory of 'television literacy' - that is, of the understanding...
The children's television program Teletubbies and its concomitant controversies are analyzed along w...
There is no denying that television, as a medium and an institution, has drastically changed in the ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 245-274.Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Literature revi...
Although clearly recognised in broader institutional histories of British children’s television as a...
This article considers the place of the ‘everyday’ and ‘practice’ in media ethnography and audience ...
This article responds to scholarship on Beckett’s television plays that regards them as positive int...
In this thesis I show how the child television audience is imagined and acted upon within an adminis...
This article, drawn from my doctoral research into children’s public service broadcasting (PSB) in t...
In recent studies on children and electronic media, children are acknowledged as active users, inter...
Although the experience of watching television has assumed a position of prime importance, not only ...
This is an ethnographic study of the making of Childhood, a seven-hour documentary series, for publi...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
references, 105 titles. The children’s television program Teletubbies and its concomitant controvers...
The paper deals with the issue of the presence of audio-visual culture in the child’s everyday life ...
This thesis seeks to contribute to a theory of 'television literacy' - that is, of the understanding...
The children's television program Teletubbies and its concomitant controversies are analyzed along w...
There is no denying that television, as a medium and an institution, has drastically changed in the ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 245-274.Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Literature revi...
Although clearly recognised in broader institutional histories of British children’s television as a...