03356oam 2200601I 450 99620220410331620170815141958.01-134-93768-71-138-17301-01-134-93769-51-280-05629-00-203-39835-110.4324/9780203398357 (CKB)1000000000254262(EBL)179188(OCoLC)252899159(SSID)ssj0000083612(PQKBManifestationID)11126113(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000083612(PQKBWorkID)10147681(PQKB)11326837(MiAaPQ)EBC179188(EXLCZ)99100000000025426220180706d1992 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrTelevision, audiences, and cultural studies /David MorleyLondon ;New York :Routledge,1992.1 online resource (331 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-203-40014-3 0-415-05445-1 Includes bibliographical references (p. [297]-311) and index.Book Cover; Title; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Theoretical frameworks; Television audience research: a critical history; Psychoanalytic theories: texts, readers and subjects; Class, ideology and interpretation; Interpreting television: the Nationwide audience; The 'Nationwide' Audience: a critical postscript; Gender, domestic leisure and viewing practices; Research development: from 'decoding' to viewing context; The gendered framework of family viewing; From Family Television to a sociology of media consumption; Methodological issuesTowards an ethnography of the television audienceTelevision, technology and consumption; Domestic communication: technologies and meanings (with Roger Silverstone); The consumption of television as a commodity; Private worlds and gendered technologies; Between the private and the public; The construction of everyday life: political communication and domestic media; Where the global meets the local: notes from the sitting-room; Notes; Bibliography; IndexTelevision, Audiences and Cultural Studies presents a multi-faceted exploration of audience research, in which David Morley draws on a rich body of empirical work to examine the emergence, development and future of television audience research. In addition to providing an introductory overview from a cultural studies perspective, David Morley questions how class and cultural differences can affect how we interpret television, the significance of gender in the dynamics of domestic media consumption, how the media construct the `national family', and how small-scale ethnographic stuTelevision broadcastingSocial aspectsTelevision viewersResearchElectronic books.Television broadcastingSocial aspects.Television viewersResearch.302.23/45302.2345Morley David1949-,163909FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK996202204103316Television, audiences, and cultural studies2139566UNISA