In this thesis I show how the child television audience is imagined and acted upon within an administrative regime of power/ knowledge. However, the imagining of this audience is not unified. Its history is marked with both discontinuities and continuities, just as the object of its disciplining is non-unitary and dispersed. Nevertheless, a definite genealogy can be traced. Particular sites emerge as distinct areas of problematisation (the family, domestic space/time, the public) and particular knowledges and institutions make specific claims for governing the audience within these areas. A central theme within the thesis is concerned with the way in which media technologies (radio and television) become embedded within the spaces of the...
Somebody once told me that today\u27s children are the leaders of tomorrow. This one simple statemen...
This thesis occupies an uneasy space: not within or even at the leading edge of any one tradition, b...
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
This book, the first academic study of its kind, uncovers a history of the child television audience...
This article considers the place of the ‘everyday’ and ‘practice’ in media ethnography and audience ...
The rigorous thesis "Bedtime story and sleep! Regulating the use of television in raising children u...
The rigorous thesis "Bedtime story and sleep! Regulating the use of television in raising children u...
This thesis is in the area of children and television. Television viewing is an important but freque...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
Contemporary mass media are perceived by programme-makers, politicians, and the public to have a par...
The quintessential image of the television audience is of the family viewing at home—sitting togethe...
Historically, the majority of work on British children’s television has adopted either an institutio...
The quintessential image of the television audience is of the family viewing at home—sitting togethe...
Somebody once told me that today\u27s children are the leaders of tomorrow. This one simple statemen...
Somebody once told me that today\u27s children are the leaders of tomorrow. This one simple statemen...
This thesis occupies an uneasy space: not within or even at the leading edge of any one tradition, b...
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
This book, the first academic study of its kind, uncovers a history of the child television audience...
This article considers the place of the ‘everyday’ and ‘practice’ in media ethnography and audience ...
The rigorous thesis "Bedtime story and sleep! Regulating the use of television in raising children u...
The rigorous thesis "Bedtime story and sleep! Regulating the use of television in raising children u...
This thesis is in the area of children and television. Television viewing is an important but freque...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
This essay, like many others, is concerned with the effects of television on children, but what is d...
Contemporary mass media are perceived by programme-makers, politicians, and the public to have a par...
The quintessential image of the television audience is of the family viewing at home—sitting togethe...
Historically, the majority of work on British children’s television has adopted either an institutio...
The quintessential image of the television audience is of the family viewing at home—sitting togethe...
Somebody once told me that today\u27s children are the leaders of tomorrow. This one simple statemen...
Somebody once told me that today\u27s children are the leaders of tomorrow. This one simple statemen...
This thesis occupies an uneasy space: not within or even at the leading edge of any one tradition, b...
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...