an MIT Press sourcebook on the Internet and the family /
First Statement of Responsibility
edited by Joseph Turow and Andrea L. Kavanaugh.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Cambridge, Mass. :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
MIT Press,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2003.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
1 online resource (ix, 502 pages).
SERIES
Series Title
MIT Press sourcebooks
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
Text of Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Family boundaries, commercialism, and the Internet : a framework for research / Joseph Turow -- Disintermediating the parents : what else is new? / Elihu Katz -- Historical trends in research on children and the media : 1900-1960 / Ellen Wartella and Byron Reeves -- The impact of the Internet on children : lessons from television / Daniel R. Anderson and Marie K. Evans -- Television and the Internet / Ellen Seiter -- Data on family and the Internet : what do we know and how do we know it? / Maria Papadakis -- A family systems approach to examining the role of the Internet in the home / Amy B. Jordan -- The Internet and the family : the views of parents and youngsters / Joseph Turow and Lilach Nir -- Mediated childhoods : a comparative approach to young people's changing media environment in Europe / Sonia Livingstone -- Outlook and insight : young Danes' uses of the Internet-- navigating global seas and local waters / Gitte Stald -- Sex on the Internet : issues, concerns and implications / Mark Griffiths -- The Internet's implications for home architecture / Steven Izenour -- Breaking up is hard to do : family perspectives on the future of the home PC / David Frohlich, Susan Dray, and Amy Silverman -- Women, guilt, and home computers / Catherine Burke -- "Nobody lives only in cyberspace" : gendered subjectivities and domestic use of the Internet / Lisa-Jane McGerty -- Internet paradox revisited / Robert Kraut [and others] -- Virtuality and its discontents / Sherry Turkle -- Three for society : households and media in the creation of twenty-first century communities / Jorge Reina Schement -- When everyone's wired : use of the Internet in networked communities / Andrea L. Kavanaugh -- Community building on the Web / Lodis Rhodes -- Examining community in the digital neighborhood : early results from Canada's wired suburb / Keith Hampton and Barry Wellman.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"The use of the internet in homes rivals the advent of the telephone, radio, or television in social significance. Daily use of the World Wide Web and e-mail is taken for granted in many families, and the computer-linked internet is becoming an integral part of the physical and audiovisual environment. The internet's features of personalization, interactivity, and information abundance raise profound new issues for parents and children. Most researchers studying the impact of the internet on families begin with the assumption that the family is the central influence in preparing a child to live in society and that home is where that influence takes place. In The Wired Homestead, communication theorists and social scientists offer recent findings on the effects of the internet on the lives of the family unit and its members. The book examines historical precedents of parental concern over "new" media such as television. It then looks at specific issues surrounding parental oversight of internet use, such as rules about revealing personal information, time limits, and web site restrictions. It looks at the effects of the web on both domestic life and entire neighborhoods. The wealth of information offered and the formulation of emerging issues regarding parents and children lay the foundation for further research in this developing field. The contributors include Robert Kraut, Jorge Reina Schement, Ellen Seiter, Sherry Turkle, Ellen Wartella, and Barry Wellman."