Inventing the Child

Inventing the Child

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  • Author: Joseph L. Zornado
  • Publisher: Garland Science
  • ISBN: 1000525023
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 336

This book traces the historical roots of Western culture's stories of childhood in which the child is subjugated to the adult. Going back 400 years, it looks again at Hamlet, fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, and Walt Disney cartoons. Inventing the Child is a highly entertaining, humorous, and at times acerbic account of what it means to be a child (and a parent) in America at the dawn of the new millennium. John Zornado explores the history and development of the concept of childhood, starting with the works of Calvin, Freud, and Rousseau and culminating with the modern "consumer" childhood of Dr. Spock and television. The volume discusses major media depictions of childhood and examines the ways in which parents use different forms of media to swaddle, educate, and entertain their children. Zornado argues that the stories we tell our children contain the ideologies of the dominant culture--which, more often than not, promote "happiness" at all costs, materialism as the way to happiness, and above all, obedience to the dominant order.


Inventing the Child

Inventing the Child

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  • Author: John Zornado
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1135862982
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 257

Now in paperback, Inventing the Child is a highly entertaining, humorous, and at times acerbic account of what it means to be a child (and a parent) in America at the dawn of the new millennium. J. Zornado explores the history and development of the concept of childhood, starting with the works of Calvin, Freud, and Rousseau and culminating with the modern 'consumer' childhood of Dr. Spock and television. The volume discusses major media depictions of childhood and examines the ways in which parents use different forms of media to swaddle, educate, and entertain their children. Zornado argues that the stories we tell our children contain the ideologies of the dominant culture - which, more often than not, promote 'happiness' at all costs, materialism as the way to happiness, and above all, obedience to the dominant order.


Inventing the Child

Inventing the Child

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  • Author: Joseph L. Zornado
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780203944516
  • Category : Children
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 257


Inventing the Child

Inventing the Child

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  • Author: Joseph L. Zornado
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis
  • ISBN: 1135577862
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 233

Traces the historical roots of Western culture's stories of childhood in which the child is subjugated to the adult. Going back 400 years, it looks again at Hamlet, fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, and Walt Disney cartoons.


Inventing the Child

Inventing the Child

PDF Inventing the Child Download

  • Author: Joseph L. Zornado
  • Publisher: Garland Science
  • ISBN: 9780815335245
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 234

Tracing the historical roots of Western culture's stories of childhood, this book looks at those texts in which the child is subjugated to the adult. Going back 400 years, it looks at Hamlet, the Brothers Grimm and Walt Disney cartoons.


Inventing the Modern Self and John Dewey

Inventing the Modern Self and John Dewey

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  • Author: T. Popkewitz
  • Publisher: Springer
  • ISBN: 1403978417
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 302

This collection includes original studies from scholars from thirteen nations, who explore the epistemic features figured in John Dewey's writings in his discourses on public schooling. Pragmatism was one of the weapons used in the struggles about the development of the child who becomes the future citizen. The significance of Dewey in the book is not about Dewey as the messenger of pragmatism, but in locating different cultural, political and educational terrains in which debates about modernity, the modern self and the making of the citizen occurred.


Inventing the Medium

Inventing the Medium

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  • Author: Janet H. Murray
  • Publisher: MIT Press
  • ISBN: 0262302802
  • Category : Design
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 499

A foundational text offering a unified design vocabulary and a common methodology for maximizing the expressive power of digital artifacts. Digital artifacts from iPads to databases pervade our lives, and the design decisions that shape them affect how we think, act, communicate, and understand the world. But the pace of change has been so rapid that technical innovation is outstripping design. Interactors are often mystified and frustrated by their enticing but confusing new devices; meanwhile, product design teams struggle to articulate shared and enduring design goals. With Inventing the Medium, Janet Murray provides a unified vocabulary and a common methodology for the design of digital objects and environments. It will be an essential guide for both students and practitioners in this evolving field. Murray explains that innovative interaction designers should think of all objects made with bits—whether games or Web pages, robots or the latest killer apps—as belonging to a single new medium: the digital medium. Designers can speed the process of useful and lasting innovation by focusing on the collective cultural task of inventing this new medium. Exploring strategies for maximizing the expressive power of digital artifacts, Murray identifies and examines four representational affordances of digital environments that provide the core palette for designers across applications: computational procedures, user participation, navigable space, and encyclopedic capacity. Each chapter includes a set of Design Explorations—creative exercises for students and thought experiments for practitioners—that allow readers to apply the ideas in the chapter to particular design problems. Inventing the Medium also provides more than 200 illustrations of specific design strategies drawn from multiple genres and platforms and a glossary of design concepts.


Inventing the Way of the Samurai

Inventing the Way of the Samurai

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  • Author: Oleg Benesch
  • Publisher: Past and Present Book
  • ISBN: 0198706626
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 305

This volume examines the development of the 'way of the samurai' (bushidō), which is popularly viewed as a defining element of the Japanese national character and even the 'soul of Japan' - to provide an overview of modern Japanese social, cultural, and political history.


Inventing the Future

Inventing the Future

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  • Author: Marilee Zdenek
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies
  • ISBN: 9780070728196
  • Category : Imagery (Psychology)
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 212


Inventing Baby Food

Inventing Baby Food

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  • Author: Amy Bentley
  • Publisher: Univ of California Press
  • ISBN: 0520959140
  • Category : Cooking
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 256

Food consumption is a significant and complex social activity—and what a society chooses to feed its children reveals much about its tastes and ideas regarding health. In this groundbreaking historical work, Amy Bentley explores how the invention of commercial baby food shaped American notions of infancy and influenced the evolution of parental and pediatric care. Until the late nineteenth century, infants were almost exclusively fed breast milk. But over the course of a few short decades, Americans began feeding their babies formula and solid foods, frequently as early as a few weeks after birth. By the 1950s, commercial baby food had become emblematic of all things modern in postwar America. Little jars of baby food were thought to resolve a multitude of problems in the domestic sphere: they reduced parental anxieties about nutrition and health; they made caretakers feel empowered; and they offered women entering the workforce an irresistible convenience. But these baby food products laden with sugar, salt, and starch also became a gateway to the industrialized diet that blossomed during this period. Today, baby food continues to be shaped by medical, commercial, and parenting trends. Baby food producers now contend with health and nutrition problems as well as the rise of alternative food movements. All of this matters because, as the author suggests, it’s during infancy that American palates become acclimated to tastes and textures, including those of highly processed, minimally nutritious, and calorie-dense industrial food products.