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Television and the Structuring of Experience

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Television and the Structuring of Experience
Author(s) Kubey, Robert; Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly
AbstractThere is little doubt that television plays an important role in the reproduction of consumer culture. On average, individuals spend up to four hours a day in contact with televised information. This paper argues that the indiscriminate viewing of television is harmful to personal growth, and explains why people spend so much time being around televisions; it also describes the differential effects of this behavior on personal development, and offers possible strategies for making television viewing a better experience.
Pages181-222
IssueNo
ArticleAccess to Article Summary Article
SourceTelevision and the Quality of Life: How Viewing Shapes Everyday Experience
VolumeNo
PubDate1990
ISBN_ISSN080580708X

Frontier Issues in Economic Thought

  • Volume 1: A Survey of Ecological Economics
  • Volume 2: The Consumer Society
  • Volume 3: Human Well-Being and Economic Goals
  • Volume 4: The Changing Nature of Work
  • Volume 5: The Political Economy of Inequality
  • Volume 6: A Survey of Sustainable Development


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