1st Edition

The Use and Abuse of Television A Social Psychological Analysis of the Changing Screen

By J. Mallory Wober Copyright 1988
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    A critical review of the harms and benefits of television that also examines systems for maximizing television's benefits. The author breaks away from the conventional jargon of audience measurement and other traditional research methods, proposing instead new and alternative European and Australian methods of evaluating programming. Typical characterizations of the television screen – broadly defined to include television, home video, movies, games, programs and computers – as either the root of all social ills or the potential savior of society are reexamined. Wober's ultimately optimistic viewpoint seeks to trigger change in the way we think about and assess television and in turn ensure that screens will serve, rather than take advantage of, their users. Originally published in 1988, this thinking-piece concerns timeless issues still of import.

    1. The One Hand Clap? Or a Sounder Way of Understanding Television  2. The Drive-In Screen and What People Will Pay to Entertain It  3. Types of Program as Produced, Partaken, and Perceived  4. Challengers: Opponents of the Screen Itself or of its Contents  5. Champions: The Prophets of the Power of the Screen  6. The Changing Screen and a Changing Viewer  7. To Zion or Gomorrah: The Highway of the Screen

    Biography

    J. Mallory Wober