YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Television Families and Society
Essays 31 - 60
of health care approaches, including prevention and rehabilitation" (Smith & Moyers 311). Smith and Moyers point out why the Unit...
get together, there was the typical conflict one would expect from step-siblings who are still wary of one another, but who know t...
In five pages the life and work of this pioneering television journalist are discussed in terms of childhood, family, and status a...
In fourteen pages this paper discusses TV sitcoms during this time period and how they portrayed the American family with past and...
In five pages these American television figures are contrasted and compared in terms of the premature deaths of their sons which l...
once mentioning the word "pregnant" in the script. This changed to some extent in the 1960s, but not as much as one might have ex...
Company to the top of the Nielsen ratings. Its premise was simple - Jack Tripper needed a cheap place to live while completing hi...
censor themselves, from including offensive material? What is okay to air in the name of comedy? To some extent, The Family Guy cr...
first introduced to America in the episode entitled "Meet the Bunkers" that CBS originally aired on Tuesday, January 12, 1971 at 9...
applies a qualitative approach in order to reach into the greater human element involved in this particular subject matter. Indee...
in many different ways, invading privacy and pushing their way into our lives. While many people accept it today, the pressures in...
the natural world held many different dangers for communities or societies. With warfare men naturally went off to fight and women...
In three pages this paper examines the primary characters in these two stories in terms of society's treatment of them and human p...
The needs of the society come before the needs of the individual, and Rand even suggests that this collective identity would suppo...
are not to be allowed any form of independence - they cannot even undertake religious fasts on their own initiative, but must join...
are even changing the way we communicate with one another (through e-mail and instant messaging) as well as doing business (via e-...
self-esteem. This is true in the family as well. Parents may have some emotional difficulties as their children grow from being li...
the entire clan is characterized as wealthy, stuffed shirts. This proves that not only are minorities the subject of stereotyping,...
Articles by sociologists Ien Ang, George Comstock, and Ron Lembo on watching television are compared and contrasted in five pages ...
of the Long Island environment. II. TV REPLACES HUMAN IMAGES Like its computer counterpart, Mander (1978) indicates that televis...
In five pages this paper examines television trends and what can be learned by an earlier decade in terms of determinations regard...
In six pages this paper discusses how new family structures will impact future families with blended families and single mother he...
In forty pages this report assesses the profound impact television has on society and its members and also considers what its 21st...
culture, but it has also been an immensely influential source in its own right. Television does influence the people who watch i...
In five pages this CBS prime time television series is subject to a semiological analysis of what its symbols reveal about Western...
sexes. Then there are other theories that put all their energy into the idea that the economy drives everything. Bourdieu (1998)...
interact with each other, and tend to ignore larger structures such as national governments and economies ("Theoretical Perspectiv...
Modern culture is replete with a diversity of what could be described as cultural artifacts. Consider, for example, the telephone...
they can to avoid conflict in the family unit. An ecological approach to studying families includes the interaction of the membe...
U.S. households and the average number of hours devoted to the medium by each household make it the ideal medium for a number of a...