Children's Media and Modernity - Film, Television and Digital Games (Hardcover, New edition)


Throughout the modern era the figure of the child has consistently reflected adult concerns about industrialisation, urbanisation, technology, consumerism and capitalism. Children represent a symbolic retreat from modern life, culturally aligned with fairy tales, medievalism, animals and nature. Yet children also embody the future and are often identified with the most contemporary forms of popular culture. This book explores how products for children navigate such contradictions by investigating the history and textuality of three major forms of modern media: cinema, television and digital games. Case studies - including Wallace and Gromit, Teletubbies, Horrible Histories, Little Big Planet and Disney Infinity - are used to illustrate the complex intersections between children's culture and modernity. Cinema - so closely associated with the emergence of modernity and mass popular culture - has had to negotiate its relationship with child audiences and depictions of childhood, often concealing its connection with modernity in the process. In contrast, television's incorporation into family home-centred, post-war modernity resulted in children being clearly positioned as the audience for this domestic entertainment. The latter decades of the twentieth century saw the promotion of home computers as educational tools for training future generations, capitalising on positive alignments between children and technologies, while digital games' narrative references, aesthetics and merchandise established the new medium as a form of children's culture.

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Product Description

Throughout the modern era the figure of the child has consistently reflected adult concerns about industrialisation, urbanisation, technology, consumerism and capitalism. Children represent a symbolic retreat from modern life, culturally aligned with fairy tales, medievalism, animals and nature. Yet children also embody the future and are often identified with the most contemporary forms of popular culture. This book explores how products for children navigate such contradictions by investigating the history and textuality of three major forms of modern media: cinema, television and digital games. Case studies - including Wallace and Gromit, Teletubbies, Horrible Histories, Little Big Planet and Disney Infinity - are used to illustrate the complex intersections between children's culture and modernity. Cinema - so closely associated with the emergence of modernity and mass popular culture - has had to negotiate its relationship with child audiences and depictions of childhood, often concealing its connection with modernity in the process. In contrast, television's incorporation into family home-centred, post-war modernity resulted in children being clearly positioned as the audience for this domestic entertainment. The latter decades of the twentieth century saw the promotion of home computers as educational tools for training future generations, capitalising on positive alignments between children and technologies, while digital games' narrative references, aesthetics and merchandise established the new medium as a form of children's culture.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften

Country of origin

Switzerland

Release date

July 2017

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

2017

Authors

Dimensions

225 x 150 x 23mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

296

Edition

New edition

ISBN-13

978-3-03-431991-1

Barcode

9783034319911

Categories

LSN

3-03-431991-6



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