Children's TV and Digital Media in the Arab World

Front Cover
Naomi Sakr, Jeanette Steemers
I.B.Tauris, Mar 30, 2017 - Social Science - 264 pages
Who analyses children’s screen content and media use in Arab countries, and with what results? Children, defined internationally as under-18s, account for some 40 per cent of Arab populations and the proportion of under-fives is correspondingly large. Yet studies of children’s media and child audiences in the region are as scarce as truly popular locally produced media content aimed at children. At the very time when conflict and uncertainty in key Arab countries have made local development and diversification of children’s media more remote, it has become more urgent to gain a better understanding of how the next generation’s identities and worldviews are formed. This interdisciplinary book is the first in English to probe both the state of Arab screen media for children and the practices of Arabic-speaking children in producing, as well as consuming, screen content. It responds to the gap in research by bringing together a holistic investigation of institutions and leading players, children’s media experiences and some iconic media texts. With children’s media increasingly linked to merchandising, which favours US-based global players and globalizing forces, this volume provides a timely insight into tensions between differing concepts of childhood and desirable media messages.

About the author (2017)

Jeanette Steemers is Professor of Culture, Media and Creative Industries at King's College London, UK. She is author of Selling Television. British Television in the Global Marketplace (BFI 2004) and is co-editor of Convergence: The Journal of Research into New Media Technologies.

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