Book Chapter10.4324/9780203877111-9
Growing Up with Television: Cultivation Processes
George Gerbner,Larry Gross,Michael Morgan,Nancy Signorielli,James Shanahan +4 more
- 01 Feb 2002
- pp 43-68
1K
TL;DR: Television is the source of the most broadly shared images and messages in history as discussed by the authors and it is the mainstream of the common symbolic environment into which our children are born and in which we all live out our lives.
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Abstract: Television is the source of the most broadly shared images and messages
in history. It is the mainstream of the common symbolic environment into
which our children are born and in which we all live out our lives. Even
though new forms of media seem to sprout up weekly, television’s mass
ritual shows no signs of weakening, as its consequences are increasingly
felt around the globe.
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Race, Colorism, Body Size, Body Position, and Sexiness: Critically Analyzing Women in Fashion Illustration Textbooks
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the fashion illustration textbooks that are currently being used within the textile and apparel discipline, using gendered stereotypes and intersegmental interconnectivity.
Television Viewing, Racial Attitudes, and Policy Preferences: Exploring the Role of Social Identity and Intergroup Emotions in Influencing Support for Affirmative Action
TL;DR: This article explored how white viewers' perceived portrayals of African-Americans and Latino-Americans on TV influence their real-world feelings and beliefs about these outgroups, which in turn affect their support for race-targeted policies.
TV, Social Media, and College Students' Binge Drinking Intentions: Moderated Mediation Models.
Bo Yang,Xinyan Zhao +1 more
TL;DR: It is predicted that exposure to TV and social media prodrinking messages can influence college students’ binge drinking intentions through perceived peer descriptive and injunctive norms and that group identification will moderate this indirect effect.
References
•Book
Television and its Viewers: Cultivation Theory and Research
James Shanahan,Michael Morgan +1 more
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: Methods of cultivation: assumptions and rationale, methods of cultivation and early empirical work, and the bigger picture: Mediation, mainstreaming.
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