CMNS: 320 Children, Media and Culture

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CMNS: 320 Children, Media and Culture

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Title: CMNS: 320 Children, Media and Culture


1
CMNS 320 Children, Media and Culture
  • Lectures Thurs.. 230 -520 AQ 3159
  • Steve Klines kline_at_sfu.ca
  • CC 7327
  • 291-4793
  • office hours Tues. 11-1
  • TA Sara Grimes smgrimes_at_sfu.ca
  • CC 6216
  • 291-3434
  • Office hours Wed. 12-200
  • TA Ben Woo bmw3_at_sfu.ca
  • Office RCB 6216
  • Phone 291-3434
  • Office hoursWed. 930-1130

2
Today
  • Review Objectives
  • Course Pedagogy?
  • Topics
  • Assignments
  • Grading
  • Course perspective/ biases
  • Children
  • Media
  • Culture
  • Why Study Childrens Media/ Culture?
  • Film Jingle All the Way

3
Crisis of PostmodernCulture
Celebrating Affluence vs. Amusing Ourselves to
Death
4
Public Discourses on Postmodern Childhood
  • Professional and Scientific Discourses
    Psychology, Education, Sociology, Anthropology,
    Law etc.
  • Parenting advisories (Books, TV, Advertising)
  • Corporate Industry discourses on childrens
    media and marketing
  • Public Debates media panics,(violence,
    literacy, addiction) child movements and
    mobilizations (Concerned Childrens Advertisers,
    Media Literacy, Alliance)
  • Family Life in mediated entertainment Films,
    Drama and Sitcoms

5
Course Objectives
  • This course introduces you to
  • The debates about the role that communication
    media play in childrens lives.
  • The historical perspective on the development of
    childrens cultural industries
  • The critical writing on childrens media products
    and cultural practices
  • The research literatures on childrens audiences
    and cultural effects
  • The policy issues, programs and regulation
    pertaining to childrens media and marketing

6
Lecture Topics
  • Section I History and Institutional Context of
    the Debates about Childrens Media and Culture
  • Jan 13 Week One Introduction-Childhood,
    Socialization, Consumer Culture
  • Jan 20 Week Two Historical Perspectives The
    Changing Matrix of Modern Socialization
  • Jan 27 Week Three Theoretical Departures A
    Crisis in the Postmodern Family?
  • Section 2 Childrens Cultural Industries
  • Feb 3 Week Four Story-telling in Transition
    Books, Literacy and Literature
  • Feb 10 Week Five Play Toys, Playgrounds, Games,
    Sports
  • Feb 17 Week Six Television Modernism in
    Translation
  • Feb 24 Week Seven Digital Domesticity and
    technified Spielraum
  • Section III Debates and Issues Researching the
    Controversies
  • Mar 3 Week Eight Marketing Lifecycles - Whose
    Rocking the Cradle?
  • Mar 10 Week Nine The Canute Complex
    Commercialization of Schools
  • Mar 17 Week Ten Mediated Girl Culture The
    Barbie Factor and Sexual Object-ions
  • Mar 24 Week Eleven Mediated Boy Culture
    Violence , Imagination and Identification

7
Pedagogy and Approach
  • Expectations workload is considerable, self and
    critical reflection, active engagement (no EXAM)
  • Readings familiarity with key writers and
    research traditions
  • Lectures provide perspectives, analyze case
    examples, provoke debate and questioning, inform
    research
  • Films Series Crisis of Childhood?
  • Reading films as critical cultural texts
  • Tutorials
  • discuss readings, films lectures
  • Discuss exercises
  • Assignments (Note Changes)
  • Log 30
  • Cultural Product Review 25
  • Research Report 30
  • Tutorial Participation 15

8
What we expect
  • You will engage with childrens culture by
    reading, watching cartoons, playing with
    children, talking to children
  • You will draw upon your own childhood
    experiences
  • You will read and take an active part in seminar
    discussions.
  • You will position yourself within debates about
    childrens culture in academic and public
    literatures
  • You will learn to defend your own ideas and
    judgements about childrens media culture and its
    effects on/ appeal to kids

9
  • Reading Logs Critical Reflections on Readings,
    Lectures, Films (due April 7)
  • Grade allocation 30
  • The reading log is submitted in lieu of an exam.
    The purpose of the reading log is to provide us
    with evidence of your active intellectual
    engagement with the course texts (which include
    readings, lectures and films). In this regard,
    the films you see and the materials presented in
    lectures are as much a part of the course texts
    as the readings. A good reading log is not simply
    a set of notes showing us that you have read the
    material. It should also provide evidence of the
    mental work you do while reading, listening and
    watching, including your interpretations,
    critical reflections (evaluations) and ideational
    associations that take place as you assimilate
    the theories and evidence encountered on this
    course as you read, watch, listen to and
    discuss the course materials. We expect you to
    demonstrate that you understand and can define
    and paraphrase ideas/ arguments from these texts.
    We also expect you to provide a thoughtful
    commentary including situating these concepts in
    their cultural-historical context, explaining why
    you think they are relevant, providing other
    complex examples of these abstract concepts, as
    well as analyzing and evaluating arguments and
    assumptions. The application of a concept to a
    new example, or a refutation of it based on
    evidence or experience are strong evidence of
    active engagement. Remember your written
    comments and responses to these texts are
    intended to provide us with evidence of your
    critical reflections including your own
    understanding and analysis of these concepts/
    theories.

10
  • Assignment 1 Assessing Childrens Cultural
    Products. Due Feb. 24 Grade allocation 25
  • The purpose of this assignment research and write
    about a particular cultural product. The
    assignment will have two parts
  • Part A (15) Un-packing the Product
  • The goal of this part of the review process is
    to analytically situate the creation of a
    cultural artefact in the context of current or
    past cultural industries practices (1500 words or
    less). By a childrens cultural product we mean
    any commodity which is designed for and sold to
    children from a My Beauty Box to the animated
    film Polar Express. This critical
    cultural-historical analysis can have a
    biographical or institutional dimension. This
    means situating the product within the corporate
    structures and practices, the genres and forms,
    the design intentionalities and personal
    biographies, as well as the public debates,
    policies, and audience reactions to them. You can
    use other texts and on-line resources in
    developing your background research for this
    cultural-historical review. Trade associations,
    journals and business news reports (CBCA) are
    very useful sources of information about
    childrens cultural industries. Stats Canada and
    other industrial sources are also worth checking
    as well as on-line fan sites and corporate
    sources. As in documentary research, all on-line
    sources must be properly referenced especially
    fansites and news and magazine stories.
  • Part B (1) On-line Review for Parents. (1000
    words or less)
  • Although childrens books, toys and the latest
    blockbuster films are sometimes reviewed in the
    press, these are frequently part of the
    promotional spin. For this reason, this part of
    the assignment asks you to write an independent
    critical evaluation of the cultural product you
    have just researched which might be useful to
    parents looking to make decisions about the
    merits, subject matter and appropriateness of the
    product. The assignment is first and foremost
    intended to get you thinking about and applying
    your own criteria for evaluating the qualities
    important in various childrens cultural
    industries whether it be toys, TV shows, films
    or comics. But it is also intended to create a
    public domain resource to which parents and
    industry might turn to find independent
    assessment of childrens cultural products. The
    reviews should be submited as PDFs which can be
    posted on the media lab website as an advisory to
    parents.

11
Assignment 2 Pilot Research ProjectGrade
allocation 30
  • This pilot research project requires you to
    engage in some primary research of your own
    either qualitative or quantitative using
    discourse analysis, surveys, interviews, focus
    groups, or ethnographic approaches. The main
    purpose of this pilot research project is to
    explain how you would now empirically address one
    issue/ debate about commercialized childrens
    culture that has been identified in the course by
    analyzing a corpus of material or a discourse (TV
    show, ads, newspaper stories) or by talking to/
    observing children and / or their families. The
    main point of the research project is to
    involve you in the gathering/ evaluating research
    evidence that informs or contributes to an
    ongoing debate about children's cultural
    industries.

12
Research Topics
  • How do children under 2 watch teletubbies?
  • Is Media Literacy being implemented in BC high
    schools?
  • Attitudes of parents to their teens use of video
    games
  • the play arratives that girls (6-10) generate
    while socializing with Barbie
  • Imaginary Landscapes Do children dream of
    television characters?

13
Proposed Group Projects
  • A) Advertising Analysis An in-depth analysis of
    food and toy advertising in the pre-Xmas period.
  • B) Fast Food Culture family food negotiations
    and discretionary eating of children.
  • C) Cyber Kids just how digitally savvy are they?
  • D) Consumer Literacy what do kids understand
    about shopping, marketing and advertising
    directed at them?
  • E) Growing Diversities cultural differences in
    the age of media saturated leisure.
  • F) Defensive Parenting Strategies for raising
    children in the consumer culture?

14
  • Participation in Seminars (Exercises) Grade
    allocation 15
  • The seminars on this course have two purposes.
    The first is to encourage you to discuss the
    ideas presented in the lectures, films and
    readings with the TA and fellow students. Because
    the tutorials are scheduled before the lecture it
    is expected that the readings, questions and
    debates will take place in the week following the
    lecture.
  • The other purpose of the seminars is to explore/
    apply in greater depth the key concepts, research
    approaches and arguments that are examined to
    this course. To this end a series of
    mini-research activities are specified and
    students are expected to come to seminars
    prepared to discuss their experiences and
    findings. Each exercise should also be entered in
    the weekly log in note form.
  • Exercise for Week 2 Family Oral History
    Families are micro-cultures with their own
    traditions and philosophies but these
    continuities are subject to the forces of social
    change. Interview your parents about their own
    childhood experiences and culture what they
    liked to do, play with, read etc. If you have
    access to grandparents, also ask them about their
    childhood focusing on what they did and
    experienced in their spare time. If you want
    to you might also ask your parent about their
    philosophies of childrearing as applied to
    yourself.
  • Exercise for Week 3 Managing Maturity
    Marketers say that children are growing older
    younger. Analyze your family as a system of
    cultural regulation identifying the rules,
    rituals, and restrictions on leisure and
    cultural consumption.
  • Exercise for Week 4 Revisiting Literacy Reading
    is often called the doorway to a childs
    imagination. Reread your favorite/ best
    remembered childrens book. Bring to class and
    explain why it influenced you.
  • Exercise for Week 5 Game Play Playing games is
    the childs way of socializing him or her self.
    Reflecting back to your favorite game explain the
    rules, social dynamics and quality of fun that
    defined your favorite game.
  • Exercise for Week 6 Saturday Morning Déjà vu
    The Saturday morning TV ritual is one of the
    pillars of childrens culture. So spend a few
    hours turning on the TV Saturday morning and see
    what is available for children. Are the shows the
    same as when you were younger? If they are
    different describe how.
  • Exerise for Week 7 Digital Delights The
    Internet and Playdium Arcades are two rather
    recent additions to the entertainment options
    available to children. Visit Playdium or search
    three childrens on line sites for the discussion
    in this week.
  • Exercise for Week 8 Discretionary Spending
    Reflect back on your own childhood consumer
    behaviour. How much allowance were you given and
    how did you spend it. What were the major
    influences on your choices (friends, advertising,
    parents etc.)
  • Exercise for Week 9 Childrens Rights and
    Cultural Research Ethics Reflect on the rights
    that children have according to the UN
    Convention. Discuss the ethical issues
    surrounding childrens research.
  • Exercise for Week 10 Pester Power A major
    debate has emerged about marketers influence on
    children under 12 years of age because they are
    vulnerable to advertisings persuasion. But how
    vulnerable are children? Reflect on the
    strategies that you used to influence family
    consumption or to get your parents/ relatives to
    buy you what you wanted.
  • Exercise for Week 11 Cool Hunters When do
    children learn to understand and perform class
    relations through managing cultural capital? What
    role did toys and other consumer objects play in
    your own understanding of social and economic
    capital?
  • Exercise for Week 12 Border Crossings It is
    sometimes argued that media play an important
    role in a multi-cultural society by exposing
    children to other cultures. Reflect back on your
    own experience of ethnic diversity explaining
    whether you think media are a resource or a
    hindrance to multi-culturalism.

15
Biases of this course
  • Social -Psychological - appreciation of the
    importance of play, stories and imagination in
    the childs maturation and learning. (not that
    child poverty, education, abuse and neglect,
    health etc. arent important)
  • Historical - interest in the social,
    technological and institutional factors that
    contribute to the emergence of postmodern
    childhood
  • Consumer Culture - focus on values, attitudes,
    cultural practices, and policy debates
    associated with the commercialization of media
    and commodification of childrens culture
    (marketplace as an agency of socialization)
  • Critical - explore issues of power, policy and
    morality associated with childrens development
    within the media saturated environment

16
Progress and Tradition in Family Life
17
THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE?
18
The Visible Hand Voice of Markets
  • Tuesday, November 23, 2004
  • The Canadian Marketing Association says retailer
    La Senza Girl is making a mistake to phone girls
    as young as nine years old at home and invite
    them for "shopping parties" at the store.
  • "You don't try to telemarket to the
    nine-year-old," says John Gustavson, president of
    the Toronto-based CMA, which has 800 members.
    "You go to the parent. It's up to the parent to
    make that decision."
  • La Senza Girl, a division of Montreal's La Senza
    Corp., targeted at girls aged 7 to 12, has signed
    up about 50,000 shoppers across Canada to its La
    Senza Girl VIP Club. The colourful 20 VIP card
    gives the girls 10 off all purchases in the
    73-store chain for a year, and 25 off at
    "shopping parties."
  • To promote the parties, the company calls those
    who have signed up to the club.
  • "We call," says a saleswoman at La Senza Girl in
    Toronto's Eaton Centre. "We call all our VIP
    members to let them know about shopping parties
    coming up. It's not any freaky telemarketing or
    anything like that."
  • Two weeks ago the phone rang at a Toronto home.
    Fiona, a mother of two, answered. She says that
    the caller asked, "Is Katie home?""I was pretty
    busy, I probably should have screened it right
    there and then," Fiona said. "I thought it was a
    school thing." Instead, she passed the phone to
    her nine-year-old daughter. "They said, 'This is
    La Senza Girl calling,' " Katie recalls. " 'We're
    going to have a shopping party on Sunday from 5
    to 8 p.m. Because you're a VIP you get a special
    discount along with that. Ask your mom if you
    want to go and she'll probably take you.' " The
    call pushed the boundaries of good taste, says
    the
  • mother. "I found it pretty cheeky. I think
    they're pushing it."
  • The Canadian Marketing Association code of ethics
    says, "All marketing interactions directed to
    children ... require the express consent of the
    child's parent or guardian.
  • Marketing to children shall not exploit
    children's credulity, lack of
  • experience or sense of loyalty. Marketers shall
    not pressure a child to urge their parents or
    guardians to purchase a product or service."
    Karine Wascher, vice-president of marketing at La
    Senza Girl, says calling children is not company
    policy.

19
Why study Childrens Media Culture?
  • Appreciating Creativity For the same reason we
    study literature art forms and culture
  • Why Pooh is better than Thomas the Tank?
  • Practical Because childrens cultural
    industries/ marketing are expanding rapidly
  • For those who want to work in Kid Kult
  • Personal As a point of departure for self
    reflection on ones own cultural identity and
    cultural practices (unlearning socialization)
  • the child within-looking for the authentic in
    culture, play and life
  • Theoretical Childhood is a site of ideological
    struggle in the consumer culture conflicts over
    power, ideology and value in our society are
    transacted in media
  • parenting as spiritual and political awakening
  • Engaging in the politics of childs culture as a
    political committment

20
Are you really going to make me watch
Teletubbies?
21
And write about Thomas?
22
Yes Some questions we will ask
  • What makes a story good to read?
  • What kinds of marketing is acceptable?
  • What do children children in play?
  • What did children do before TV?
  • Havent boys always played war games?
  • Do Spice Girls empower?

23
Issues in Childrens Cultural Analysis
Morality, Taste and Well-being?
  • Kulture (civilization) vs popular culture
    (entertainment)
  • Eg Should violence be banned from video games?
  • Rethinking Texts narratives, images, rituals,
    actions as meaning making
  • eg Making sense of war play as narrative
    cultural practice with toys
  • Socialization vs Self-expression children making
    meaning but not always in conditions of their own
    making.
  • - eg a childs drawing reveals both encoding of
    culture plus decoding (culture made for children
    vs. the culture that children make on their own)

24
Expanding Commodified Culture Boom in Childrens
Cultural Industries
25
Animation is big business 2.6 billion
  • Lion King 504 mill
  • Incredibles70 million in one weekend
  • Polar Express23 M in opening weekend
  • Finding Nemo
  • Boxoffice865/ DVD324
  • Shrek 2 880 mill box ancillaries
  • Lord of the Ring and Harry Potter

26
Childrens Culture is an Industry
27
Jobs that require you to know about childrens
culture
  • Writing (Rowling is richer than the queen?)
  • Education teaching, libraries, policing
  • Marketing research, advertising, merchandising
  • Clinical Psychology and social work (gender
    neutral dolls)
  • Leisure industries, travel, sports

28
Researching Cultural Workers
29
Childrens writers as celebrities
30
Pooh Spirituality and Shrek Management?
31
The Child Within?
32
Postmodern Parenting The personal is the
political
  • Parenting is a biological necessity and a
    practical impossibility
  • Consumer culture as an alien landscape - the
    lived experience of family leisure and the
    ideologies of childhood are in conflict
  • Parenting can be radicalizing
  • The irrationality of having children The
    cultural environment in which we raise our
    children has become conflicted
  • The value choices of of the media saturated
    lifestyle have become the central issues for
    parents who come to recognize the contradictions
    --Especially at Xmas

33
MEGHAN PLAYS BARBIE
34
From Out of the Garden to Jingle all the Way
  • Nurturing vs self interest
  • Sharing vs ownership
  • Responsibility vs Pleasure
  • Community vs. Individuality
  • Public Interest vs. Corporate Interest

35
Critical Theories of the Marketplace as a Social
Communication System
  • The Ambivalent Meaning of Things The Paradox of
    Affluence (Schorr)
  • Crisis in the Family Conflicting Values of
    education and leisure (Postman)
  • The Changing Matrix of Socialization Policy
    conflicts over protecting the vulnerable child or
    liberating the competent one in the mediated
    marketplace? (Kline)
  • Authenticity and Resistance Is there such a
    thing as childrens own culture?

36
A Childs Festival of Greed
37
The Santa Clause
38
Faustian Christmas
39
Film as Text
  • What is the thesis of Jingle about the problem of
    postmodern childhood
  • How are the ideas expressed
  • Through plot
  • Through character
  • Through dialogue
  • Through emotional point of view
  • Through resolution
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