Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television
Right from the origins of cinema, countless films and television dramas have offered sensational and seductive representations of young people's lives. Youth is typically associated with energy, idealism and physical beauty, but it is often represented as both troubled and troubling. These representations are almost always created by adults, implicitly reflecting an adult perspective on how young people 'come of age'.

Youth on Screen provides a historical account of representations of youth in Britain and the United States, stretching back over seventy years. From Blackboard Jungle to This is England, and from Jailhouse Rock to Skins, it covers a range of classics, as well as some intriguing obscurities. Engagingly written and clearly organized, it offers a perfect introduction for students and general readers.

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Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television
Right from the origins of cinema, countless films and television dramas have offered sensational and seductive representations of young people's lives. Youth is typically associated with energy, idealism and physical beauty, but it is often represented as both troubled and troubling. These representations are almost always created by adults, implicitly reflecting an adult perspective on how young people 'come of age'.

Youth on Screen provides a historical account of representations of youth in Britain and the United States, stretching back over seventy years. From Blackboard Jungle to This is England, and from Jailhouse Rock to Skins, it covers a range of classics, as well as some intriguing obscurities. Engagingly written and clearly organized, it offers a perfect introduction for students and general readers.

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Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television

Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television

by David Buckingham
Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television

Youth on Screen: Representing Young People in Film and Television

by David Buckingham

Paperback

$24.95 
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Overview

Right from the origins of cinema, countless films and television dramas have offered sensational and seductive representations of young people's lives. Youth is typically associated with energy, idealism and physical beauty, but it is often represented as both troubled and troubling. These representations are almost always created by adults, implicitly reflecting an adult perspective on how young people 'come of age'.

Youth on Screen provides a historical account of representations of youth in Britain and the United States, stretching back over seventy years. From Blackboard Jungle to This is England, and from Jailhouse Rock to Skins, it covers a range of classics, as well as some intriguing obscurities. Engagingly written and clearly organized, it offers a perfect introduction for students and general readers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509545261
Publisher: Polity Press
Publication date: 08/30/2021
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

David Buckingham is an Emeritus Professor of Media and Communications at Loughborough University, and a Visiting Professor at Kings College London, UK. His research has focused on children and young people’s interactions with media, and on media literacy education.

Table of Contents

Contents


Acknowledgments


1. Introduction

2. Troubling teenagers: how movies constructed the juvenile delinquent 

3. Dreamboats, boybands and the perils of showbiz: the rise and fall of the pop film

4. Reeling in the years: retrospect and nostalgia in movies about youth

5. Gender trouble: cinema and the mystery of adolescent girlhood

6. This is England: growing up in Thatcher’s Britain

7. Skins and the impossibility of youth television

8. Conclusion: histories and futures


Further reading

TV and filmography

Notes

Bibliography
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