Making Sense of Television 在线电子书 图书标签: MEDIA 英文原版 英文 英国 美国 社会学 心理学 专业
发表于2024-11-05
Making Sense of Television 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024
系里一把手的书 还是满好读的一本⋯⋯
评分系里一把手的书 还是满好读的一本⋯⋯
评分系里一把手的书 还是满好读的一本⋯⋯
评分系里一把手的书 还是满好读的一本⋯⋯
评分系里一把手的书 还是满好读的一本⋯⋯
Biography
Sonia Livingstone (BSc Psychology, UCL; DPhil Social Psychology, Oxford) joined the LSE in 1990 and is Professor of Social Psychology in the Department of Media and Communications. She is author of eleven books, and has published widely on the subject of media audiences, focusing on audience reception of diverse television genres. Her recent work concerns children, young people and the internet, as part of a broader interest in the domestic, familial and educational contexts of new media access and use
Books include Making Sense of Television (2nd edition, Routledge, 1998), Mass Consumption and Personal Identity (with Peter Lunt; Open University Press, 1992), Talk on Television (with Peter Lunt; Routledge, 1994), Children and Their Changing Media Environment (edited with Moira Bovill, Erlbaum, 2001), The Handbook of New Media (edited with Leah Lievrouw; Sage, 2002, updated edition 2006), Young People and New Media (Sage, 2002), Audiences and Publics (edited; Intellect, 2005), Harm and Offence in Media Content (with Andrea Millwood Hargrave; Intellect, 2006), Media Consumption and Public Engagement (with Nick Couldry; Palgrave, 2007), and The International Handbook of Children, Media and Culture (edited with Kirsten Drotner; Sage, 2008).
Sonia Livingstone was President of the International Communication Association (2007/08) and was Conference Chair for the ICA conference held in San Francisco in May 2007. She continues to serve as a member of the Executive Committee of ICA.
Sonia Livingstone has been awarded research funding from the Economic and Social Research Council, the European Science Foundation, the European Commission, the European Parliament, British Telecom, the BBC, Ofcom, the Independent Television Commission, the Broadcasting Standards Commission, the Advertising Association, the ITVA, the Leverhulme Trust, and Yorkshire/Tyne-Tees Television.
She has held visiting professor positions at the Universities of Copenhagen, Stockholm, Bergen, Illinois and Milan, and is on the editorial board of several leading journals in the field, including New Media and Society, The Communication Review, Journal of Communication, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, European Journal of Communication and Journal of Children and Media.
She is a member of the new UK Council for Child Internet Safety and serves on the Board of the Voice of the Listner and Viewer. In recent years she was Vice Chair and Board Member of the Internet Watch Foundation, a member of the Home Secretary’s Task Force for Child Protection on the Internet, and a member of the Ministerial Taskforce for Home Access to Technology for Children, DfES. She has advised the Office of Communications, the Department for Children, Schools and Families, the Home Office, the Economic and Social Research Council, the BBC, and the Higher Education Funding Council, among others.
Her research expertise includes: social contexts and uses of ICT, especially domestic/family uses of the internet; children, young people and the internet; media literacy and critical media audiences/users; mediated publics, media for citizenship and the public sphere; television audiences, especially history, media uses, audience reception, media effects; internet use and policy, including the public understanding of communications regulation; research methods in media and communications.
Product Description
Taking the soap opera as a case study this book explores the way people engage with television. This new edition takes into account recent research work, theoretical developments and looks forward to the development of audience research.
From the Back Cover
^Making Sense of Television addresses an issue central to the social psychological perspective on the mass media - how viewers interpret the programmes that they see. Sonia Livingstone presents original research which shows that audiences interpret programmes in diverse ways, depending on their own socio-cultural contexts. She uses the soap opera as a particularly interesting and challenging case study to explore these issues. The book looks at the nature of the 'active viewer', the role of the text in social psychology, and investigates the existing theoretical models offered by social psychology and other discourses.
This second edition takes into account recent developments in fields such as narrative psychology, social representation theory, ethnographic work on audiences, and the developing role of audience research. It will be an essential study for students and lecturers in social psychology and media studies.
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Making Sense of Television 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024