03799nam a2200541 a 4500001001400000003000400014008003100018020001800049020001800067039004500085041000800130099001000138100003100148245013800179260005400317300001100371505005400382505008300436505008900519505013900608505006900747505010800816505011600924505007401040505005201114505016101166505011701327505011601444505005701560505014201617505012201759505015201881505014602033505005702179505010002236505018002336505034602516650002602862650002702888650004202915650006302957650004403020650005503064650004503119856006903164942000703233999001703240vtls000079763MTX160715 001 0 eng d a9780739179581 a9780739179574 9a201607151151bstaffy201605041233zadmin0 aeng aEbook1 aRyan, Kathleen M..9116907 aTelevision and the self:bknowledge, identity, and media representation/h[electronic resource] /cDeborah A. Kathleen M.;Macey Ryan. bThe Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group,c2013. a302 p.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter One: Introduction.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttPart One: The Electronic Hearth, or the (un)Real World.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Two: The Way We Were: Ritual, Memory, and Television.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Three: Becoming-Spectator: Tracing Global Becoming through Polish Television in a Canadian Family Room.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttPart Two: Father (and Mother) Knows Best.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Four: As Seen on TV: Media Influences of Pregnancy and Birth Narratives.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Five: All About My HBO Mothers: Talking Back to Carmela Soprano and Ruth Fisher.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Six: Mad Hatters: The Bad Dads of AMC.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttPart Three: Family Ties.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Seven: Family Communication and Television: Viewing, Identification, and Evaluation of Televised Family Communication Models.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Eight: Reality Check: Real Housewives and Fan Discourses on Parenting and Family.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Nine: Keeping Up with Contradictory Family Values: The Voice of the Kardashians.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttPart Four: The Facts of Life.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Ten: The Selling of Gender-Role Stereotyping: A Content Analysis of Toy Commercials Airing on Nickelodeon.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Eleven: "Stand By, Space Rangers": Interstellar Lessons in Early Cold War Masculinity.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Twelve: The Avengers and Feminist Identity Development: Learning the Example of Critical Resistance from Cathy Gale.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Thirteen: Juno for Real: Negotiating Teenage Sexuality, Pregnancy, and Love in MTV's 16 and Pregnant/Teen Mom.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttPart Five: As Not Seen on TV.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Fourteen: Race, Aging, and Gay In/Visibility on U.S. Television.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter Fifteen: Eighty is Still Eighty, But Everyone Else Needs to Look Twenty-Five: The Fascination with Betty White Despite Our Obsession with Youth.0 aCover, Title,Television and the self: knowledge, identity, and media representation--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Contents--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Acknowledgments--References, Appendix, Index,Bibliography--References, Appendix, Index,Index--References, Appendix, Index,About the Contributors--References, Appendix, Index,About the Editors. 0aSocial Science919210 0aPopular Culture930874 0aSocial Science: Media Studies9116908 0aLanguage Arts & Disciplines: Communication Studies9116909 0aSocial Science: Women's Studies9116852 0aSocial Science: Feminism & Feminist Theory9116910 0aSocial Science: Minority Studies911691140uhttp://portal.igpublish.com/iglibrary/search/ROWMANB0004929.html c10 c76312d76312