The Small Screen: How Television Equips Us to Live in the Information AgeISBN: 978-1-4051-6154-1
Hardcover
216 pages
July 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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Other Available Formats: Paperback
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- A cultural history of prime time American television during the
1990s, a period in which television underwent several dramatic
changes
- Examines changes that took place in programming, such as the
rapid adoption of cable, the proliferation of content providers,
the development of niche marketing, the introduction of
high-definition television, the blurring of traditional genres, and
the creation of new formats like reality-based programming
- Argues that television programmes of the 1990s afforded viewers
a symbolic resource for negotiating the psychological challenges
associated with the shift from the Industrial Age to the
Information Age
- Explores the ways in which television provided viewers with tools for coming to terms with their fears about living in the fast-paced, increasingly diverse, information-laden society of the 90s