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Avidly Reads Screen Time

Phillip Maciak

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NYU Press img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Technik

Beschreibung

What happens when screen time is all the time?

In the early 1990s, the phrase “screen time” emerged to scare parents about the dangers of too much TV for kids. Screen time was something to fret over, police, and judge in a low-grade moral panic. Now, “screen time” has become a metric not only for good parenting, but for our adult lives as well. There’s even an app for it! In the streaming era—and with streaming made nearly ubiquitous during COVID-19—almost every aspect of our day is mediated by these bright surfaces. Whether it was ever the real villain in the first place, or merely a convenient proxy for unaddressed familial, social, and institutional failures, screen time is now all the time.

Avidly Reads Screen Time is a funny, insightful work of cultural criticism and history about how we define screens, and how they now define us. From Mad Men to iCarly, Vine to FaceTime, binge-watching to doom-scrolling, Phillip Maciak leads us on a sometimes heartwarming, sometimes harrowing tour of the media that brings us together and tears us apart.

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Schlagwörter

Dawson’s Creek, essays, Twin Peaks, criticism, The Americans, Wall-E, Mad Men, tv, film criticism, essay collection, pop culture, Nintendo Wii, Scandal, House Hunters, roger ebert, The Wire, cultural history, film critic, Stranger Things, popular culture, tv shows, culture, movies, Bluey, television criticism, tv history, books about screen time, history of tv shows, Halt and Catch Fire, Leftover, film criticism books, performing arts, The Sopranos, social history, TiVo, television, Homeland, American Crime Story, books about television, Ghostbuster's, television history, The Real World, DuckTales