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The killing screens : media and the culture of violence / executive producer and director, Sut Jhally.
Annenberg Circulation Desk VHS PN1992.8.V55 K55 1994
Available
- Format:
- Video
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Television--Social aspects.
- Television.
- United States--Intellectual life--20th century.
- United States.
- Intellectual life.
- Aggressiveness on television.
- Violence in mass media.
- Violence on television.
- Violence--Research.
- Violence.
- Television and families--United States.
- Television and families.
- Television and children--United States.
- Television and children.
- Television--Psychological aspects.
- Mass media--Social aspects.
- Mass media.
- Popular culture--United States.
- Popular culture.
- Genre:
- Television programs.
- Documentary television programs.
- Video recordings.
- Physical Description:
- 1 videocassette (41 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in.
- 1/2 in.
- polychrome
- Other Title:
- Media and the culture of violence
- Place of Publication:
- Northampton, MA : Media Education Foundation, [1994]
- System Details:
- VHS - NTSC.
- analog
- magnetic
- VHS
- NTSC
- Summary:
- Explores why there is so much violence on television and its effects on viewers. Addresses psychological, political, social, and developmental impacts of growing and living within a cultural environment of pervasive, ritualized violent representation. Suggests new ways of thinking about the negative effects of mass media on society, and discusses what can be done. Questions and ideas are based on the results of a 20-year ongoing study, the Cultural Indicators Project, by Dr. George Gerbner.
- Contents:
- 1. Stories of power
- 2. Happy violence
- 3. Accelerating violence
- 4. Violence is a social relationship
- 5. Lessons of violence
- 6. Citizenship in the cultural environment
- 7. What parents, teachers, and schools can do.
- Participant:
- Host, Dr. George Gerbner ; Jean Kilbourne.
- Credits:
- Cameramen, Fred Speckles, Robert DiNozzi ; editors Robert DiNozzi ; music composed and performed by Michael Morgan.
- OCLC:
- 30432305
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