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Television
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Television is one of the most studied media forms in communications courses, and it sits at the intersection of cultural studies, media literacy, media effects research, and public policy. Students write about it because it functions simultaneously as entertainment, news delivery, political platform, and social mirror. Its reach into American homes makes it a reliable subject for examining how mass media shapes attitudes, reinforces or challenges stereotypes, and influences public life. The Kennedy-Nixon debates, for instance, stand as a landmark case for understanding how the medium transformed political communication, while works like the soap opera form raise questions about genre, audience, and cultural value.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some examine media effects directly, asking whether television violence increases aggression in children or whether excessive viewing harms educational development. Others take a cultural criticism angle, analyzing how television shapes identity, perpetuates stereotypes such as the redneck stereotype, or represents women and reality in America. Policy-oriented essays engage questions raised by cases like Citizens United v. FEC, while more literary or comparative essays draw connections between television's social influence and dystopian works such as 1984 and Brave New World.

A strong essay on television narrows its scope to a specific claim about the medium's impact—on a demographic, a genre, or a social outcome—rather than arguing broadly that television is good or bad. Evidence drawn from documented programs, historical events, or peer-reviewed genre studies carries more weight than general impressions. The most common pitfall is conflating correlation with causation, particularly when arguing that viewing habits directly produce behavioral or developmental outcomes.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Japan\'s History and Culture
Mass Culture in Postwar Japan: As Seen Through the Films, Tokyo Drifter and Ohayo
Paper Doctorate
Is the Concept of Flow Still Relevant Television Studies?
Flow, as Csikszentmihalyi (1990) has instigated, portrays the condition in which populace are so engaged in an action that nothing besides it appears to be of major concern (p. 4). Flow was originally referred to…
Paper Doctorate
Parenting Because Parenting Is so Very Personal,
Because parenting is so very personal, I approached this essay with a lot of curiosity, and even some amount of concern over what the literature on the subject might reveal. I expected to find a number of high-minded…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mass Communications Applying Mass Communication Theories What
The paper is a series of short answer questions regarding marketing strategies, communication design, and their affects upon consumers. Critical to the discussion of such topics include the experience of the consumer, ethical dilemmas, and charting the observable affects of mass communication upon the behaviors, attitudes, and perceptions of consumers.
Paper Undergraduate
Widdowson\'s Claim That Television and Film Cannot Produce an Aesthetic Effect
Widdowson claims that television and film do not fit the definition of "literary" objects. For one, a script for film or television production has no autonomy. As Widdowson points out, "while there is always a script on…
Research Paper Doctorate
California and its residents: historical and cultural perspectives
Walt E. Disney sat down on a bench at a small amusement park in California to watch his daughters play. While he was setting there, he noticed how tattered and filthy the small amusement park was.
Essay Masters
Nickel and Dimed: low-wage work in America
In Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed, the workers trapped in dead-end service sector jobs have virtually no chance at all of escaping poverty or obtaining any meaningful quality of life.
Paper Doctorate
Bfskinner Interview With B.F. Skinner Describe Your
Describe your life and work in the field of psychology.
Paper Undergraduate
Should Australia Have a Bill of Rights
Australia is the last remaining Common Law country without a Bill or Rights or Human Rights Bill. It is important to note that the Australian variant of liberalism differs from the Anglo-American model in two important ways. First, the establishment of Australia as a series of British colonies under authoritarian governors and the absence of any political revolution has meant a lesser stress on the idea of individual rights versus the state. There has been no one in Australian history to shout 'Give me liberty or give me death', no real pressure to incorporate a Bill of Rights into our Constitution (Rowse, 1978).
Paper Doctorate
Representations of Female Sexuality in the 1950\'s
This paper looks at how certain icons of the 1950s changed perceptions of female sexuality following the second world war. Barbie was first introduced in 1959, beauty pageants were broadcast to every hiome in the United States and Marilyn Monroe was parading across the big screen and changing everyone's view of beauty and sexuality.