ABSTRACT
Television, 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 studies can help us to understand the global-local dynamics of postmodern media systems.
Morley's work reconceptualises the study of `ideology' within the broader context of domestic communications, illuminating the role of the media in articulating public and private spheres of experience and in the social organisation of space, time and community.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |1 pages
Introduction
chapter |5 pages
WHAT’S IN A TITLE
chapter |2 pages
STARTING-POINTS
chapter |8 pages
RETROSPECT: THE ‘NATIONWIDE’ AUDIENCE RECONSIDERED
chapter |22 pages
AUDIENCE STUDIES, NOW AND IN THE FUTURE?
part |2 pages
Part I Theoretical frameworks
chapter |14 pages
Television audience research: a critical history
chapter |12 pages
Psychoanalytic theories: texts, readers and subjects
part |2 pages
Part II Class, ideology and interpretation
chapter |42 pages
Interpreting television: the Nationwide audience
chapter |12 pages
The ‘Nationwide’ Audience: a critical postscript
part |2 pages
Part III Gender, domestic leisure and viewing practices
chapter |6 pages
Research development: from ‘decoding’ to viewing context
chapter |20 pages
The gendered framework of family viewing
chapter |12 pages
From Family Television to a sociology of media consumption
part |2 pages
Part IV Methodological issues
chapter |24 pages
Towards an ethnography of the television audience
part |2 pages
Part V Television, technology and consumption
chapter |12 pages
Domestic communication: technologies and meanings
chapter |8 pages
The consumption of television as a commodity
chapter |26 pages
Private worlds and gendered technologies
part |2 pages
Part VI Between the private and the public