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This volume explores how television has been a significant conduit for the public consumption of changing ideas about children, childhood, and national identity, via a critical examination of programs that prominently feature children and youth in international television. The chapters connect relevant cultural attitudes within their respective countries to an analysis of children and/or childhood in international children’s programming. The collection addresses how international children’s programming in global and local context informs changing ideas about children and childhood, including notions of individual and citizen identity formation. Offering new insights into childhood and television studies, this book will be of great interest to graduate students, scholars, and professionals in television studies, childhood studies, media studies, cultural studies, popular culture studies, and American studies.
Debbie Olson is Associate Professor of English at Missouri Valley College, Marshall, Missouri. Adrian Schober is a Teacher Librarian at Caroline Chisholm Catholic College, Melbourne.
IntroductionDebbie Olson Part One: Cultural Evolution1. Migration, Youth and Australian Television: Production, Policies, and AudiencesKyle Harvey2. Skippy the Bush Kangaroo: Idealism, ‘Reality’ and 1960s Australian Children’s TelevisionAdrian Schober 3. I Know I Can Make it New: Degrassi, Youth Television, and the Work of Staying RelevantAndrea Ruehlicke 4. TV Horror for Children as Transnational Genre: Round the Twist, Generic Subversions, and Quality Australian Children’s TelevisionJessica BalanzateguiPart Two: Television Programming and National Identities5. Children’s Maritime Television in Britain: Environment, Representation and IdentityMark Fryers 6. "‘Thunderbirds are Go!’: Ideology and Representation in the Cold War Era Fran Pheasant-Kelly7. A Socialist School Story: The Czechoslovak television series "My všichni školou povinní"Martina Winkler Part Three: Televisual Style and National Identities8. Aardman’s Animal Farm: "Loaded" Livestock and Illustrative Aesthetics in Shaun the Sheep (2007-2015) Christopher Holliday 9. The Sound of Norwegian Children’s Television: Narrating the Nation, Childhood and the Welfare StateIngeborg Lunde Vestad Part Four: Child Agency10. Representations of Childhood and "Modes of Address" in Palestinian and Pan-Arab Programs for Children Feryal Awan 11. From Quinceañera to Miss XV: Coming of Age in Mexican Screen MelodramaSofia Rios 12. Gender, Ideology and Latin American Children's Animated TelevisionMilton Fernando Gozalez-Rodriguez
Ted Nannicelli, Héctor J. Pérez, Australia) Nannicelli, Ted (The University of Queensland, Spain) J. Perez, Hector (Universitat Politecnica de Valencia