Telling All The Stories - Children and Television - George Gebner
Telling All The Stories - Children and Television - George Gebner
Telling All The Stories - Children and Television - George Gebner
Volume 16
Issue 1 Sacred Heart University Review, Volume XVI, Article 2
Numbers 1 & 2, Fall 1995/ Spring 1996
February 2010
Recommended Citation
Gerbner, George (2010) "Telling All the Stories: Children and Television," Sacred Heart University Review: Vol. 16 : Iss. 1 , Article 2.
Available at: http://digitalcommons.sacredheart.edu/shureview/vol16/iss1/2
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Telling All the Stories: Children and Television
Cover Page Footnote
George Gerbner is Professor and Dean Emeritus at the Annenberg School for Communications, University of
Pennsylvania. This is an edited transcription of a talk he gave at Sacred Heart University on July 8, 1996 as part
of a Media Studies Department Summer Institute on Teaching Media Literacy.
GEORGE GERBNER
You may have heard the story about the teacher who said to the
class, ``Children, who can tell me what our century owes to Mr.
Thomas Alva Edison.'' One student raised her hand and said,
``Teacher, I can tell you. Without Mr. Edison we would still be
watching television by candle-light.'' Our children cannot imagine that
there was such an age, and I think in a sense they are right, because
television, which is the mainstream of our culture as we organized the
rest of the media, is fundamentally different from other media and
ushered in a new age which has profoundly changed the way that our
children and all of us are socialized.
In order to understand and appreciate and try to see that change
in perspective, we have to start with a very basic question: What is it
that makes human beings human? My answer to that question is that
human beings are the only creatures that we know (or I know) that live
in a world erected by the stories we tell. That means that most of the
things that we know or think we know we have never personally
experienced, and it's very rare that we realize that most of what we do
is not in response to the immediate physical environment, as all other
animals behave: they would come in here in order to look for shelter
or escape from danger or just get warm or find food. We come in here
to exchange stories, in a very general sense in which story is not just
traditional storytelling but essentially all of what we think or what we
know about life, about other people. All of our signs by whatever
means ─ whether it's architecture, painting, words, music; whether we
call it science, whether we call it laws ─ convey a perspective, are
basically little stories that inform us about what life is all about.
_______________
George Gerbner is Professor and Dean Emeritus at the Annenberg School for
Communications, University of Pennsylvania. This is an edited transcription of
a talk he gave at Sacred Heart University on July 8, 1996 as part of a Media
Studies Department Summer Institute on Teaching Media Literacy.
Functionally, there are only three kinds of stories. First, stories that
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show how things work. Now, how things work is essentially invisible.
It's the hidden connection that's the most important: the hidden
dynamics of life, relationships of cause and effect, relationships among
people. The way to make the invisible visible is to create a story,
preferably or often with imagery, that literally makes it visible: create
individuals, create people, put them in action, and have the story
unravel as the mystery of what is going on behind the scenes, where we
don't see it. This type of story is what we call fiction and drama. It is the
basic socializing story because it's the first that we encounter in life ─
fairy-tales, stories of all kinds ─ and because it brings us to all the
situations in life before we get to it.
The second kind of story is a story about what things are. It really
fills in the gaps. The story of the first kind, stories about how things are
built, are fantasy that we call reality. And by that I don't mean that it is
false: I mean it's synthetic, it's socially constructed, it is constructed
according to the stories that we hear and we tell, and this is how things
work. Now in order to give that fantasy some testing, some warrant,
some verisimilitude, we tell the second kind of story about facts or
information about exposition. We sometimes call this legend; today,
most of it we call news. News in every society is selected out to support
that society's fantasy of how things work, and if you go around the
world and look at news, you see that these stories are all basically more
or less objective or unobjective; that's not the basic difference. The
basic difference is what a society selects out to consider relevant and
important, to select out as a fact or an act or an event that relates to its
own interests. One of the reasons why we emphasize stories of crime
and violence so much is that they represent threats to the social order
presumably; but in every society stories that threaten a particular set of
social relationships and then show how we deal with such threats and
how we build support for dealing with them, very often by aggression,
become newsworthy.
The third type of story is a story of value and choice; that is, if this
is how things work and this is what things are, now what are we going to
do about it? These stories present some kind of a value that is
desirable, some kind of an objective, and give us some instruction as to
how to reach it. These are instructions, these are sermons; today most
of them are called commercials. They are essentially little stories that
posit a value and then provide an avenue to its availability and even
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Gerbner: Telling All the Stories: Children and Television
instruct us as to exactly how to get it and usually what the price is.
These three story functions have been woven together throughout
human history into a seamless texture that we call culture. I define
culture as a large set of artifacts like old stories that illuminate the
hidden dynamics of how things work, what things are, and what to do
about them, and that really erect the kind of environment to which we
respond and in light of which we act and behave all our lives.
For the longest time in human history these stories were woven
together essentially by hand, so to speak, by handicraft ways, in
response to communities, to neighborhoods, to tribes, to regions, and
of course in different language communities and so on, but essentially
face to face. That means that they were infinitely adjustable, but also
means that they were highly centralized, and it was usually the priest or
the chief of the tribe that had the right to prescribe and to tell the
stories. Today the opportunity for face to face interaction becomes
rare, and it is, as I'm sure we all learn, more and more difficult to get
people, with the pressures and with the fragmentation of time, and with
the way in which we are inundated with mass-produced, mechanical
story-telling, with the competition on time, to persuade people to make
that investment of actually going to a place where the occasion is the
exchanging of stories. And the reason is the first major transformation
in story-telling, which is the Industrial Revolution.
The first machine is the printing press. The first industrial
product, it is difficult for us to recognize now, is the book. It is really
the precondition for all the rest of the upheavals to follow that we call
the Industrial Revolution. When a book starts printing out stories, it's
the beginning of the industrialization of storytelling. It's the beginning
of the era in which human consciousness becomes intimately related
to the social order, to a particular industrial order and its ownership, its
management, its control over the raw materials as well as over the
talent and over the distribution of stories. It breaks the power of the
priest. In effect it says ─ someone like Martin Luther says ─ you no
longer need the priest: we give you the Bible, the book; interpret it for
yourself. So it ushers in the Reformation, and it provides the basis for
the fundamental condition for any form of self-government, any form
of plurality in society which didn't exist in tribal society: it was all highly
homogenous within the tribe, within the local community. But it begins
to build the precondition for plurality of publics in the same society.
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festivals, which are big bazaars where all this trading is going on, in lots
of a dozen or twenty-five that the buyers are not even allowed to look
at. Take it or leave it, because it's such a cheap, irresistible business
deal. You are producing for that kind of a market and you ask
yourself: What is it that needs no translation, that speaks action in any
language, that is essentially image-driven, and that fits into any culture?
And the answer by far is violence. Sex is a distant second because it
runs into, ironically enough, much more censorship and codes than
violence. It's an ironic fact of life that a life-giving activity is more likely
to be censored than a life-taking activity, but that's the way it is. So we
produce and export 20% more so-called action programs ─ action
program is a code word for violence in the trade ─ than we even
exhibit at home. This is America's second biggest export. Do you know
what the first one is? The first one is armaments, the second is
television and motion pictures. Sometimes I say first we sell arms and
then we teach them how to use them. So it's a very big business, a
multi-billion dollar per year business, and it's big business because it is
sold in so many countries. Take Power Rangers, for example. This is
really a cheap program. It's a recycled Japanese series with some action
footage put in as part of a global merchandising concept ─ the program
is essentially designed to sell the paraphernalia ─ but it's playing in 80
countries; 300 million children see it every night. There's never been
anything like it, and now the successor is already in the works, and this
is a huge, global marketing sensation.
And the reason is that we can sell it. I say we: these conglomerates
happen to be headquartered in Hollywood. The money is a
transnational investment, but the factories are mostly in Hollywood.
The syndicators say we can sell you an hour's worth of this
programming for less than it could cost you to produce one minute of
your own, and our government ─ in fact most of the governments and
most of the private entrepreneurs ─ fall for this deal, because they
know that the audience is always there, and if they can cheapen the
product, they still make more money than if they do something more
popular in each country, local home production, but which would be
more costly because it's for a smaller market.
By buying such programs, they are not just buying cheap
entertainment and even cheap news (news is getting into global
distribution as well: Fox is going into it, Turner is going into it, CNN,
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and so on). They are driving their own artists, their own journalists,
their own producers, out of business, unless they do something that
some countries do, like in France. The French charge a 2% tax on
theater admissions, a 3% tax on videotape. This generates a large sum
that is paid into a fund that provides loans for independent production,
so that there's a major national effort to keep some sense of plurality
and independence alive. We have driven these out. There are no
more independent producers in the United States and not even the
networks are independent any more: they are owned by other
conglomerates, multi-media and in fact multi-enterprise
conglomerates. So there is no sense of independence, and we are
rapidly going in the direction of total control of cultural life by a
handful of conglomerates.
This is a global system that we have drifted into, without any public
debate or recognition or certainly attention or publicity, and the
finishing touches were given to it by the Telecommunications Act of
1996. That Act, passed and signed by the President in January, not
only does away with any kind of anti-trust consideration, much of
which was not even enforced now for decades, but essentially not only
legalizes and legitimizes monopolies but unleashes monopolies. It says
to them, ``You're free to go in the world market: we are going to
support you by our trade policies, like NAFTA, like GATT,''
regardless of the objection of our allies and of our trading partners,
which are vociferous but relatively ineffective because sometimes their
own governments and usually their own broadcasters buy the cheap
product because it is so enormously profitable.
The writers say, ``There is no free market: this is not an
expression of our freedom. This is an expression of a de facto
censorship.'' And when I talk to them in Hollywood, as I frequently
do, they say, ``Don't talk to me about censorship from Washington. I
never heard about that. I mean, to be sure, that's always a danger, but I
don't hear about that. I hear about censorship every day. I'm told to
put more action in this, or if I have something a little more
complicated or a little more sophisticated or a little more complex
resolution of a conflict, they'll say `That's too slow. Take it out.' That is
the kind of censorship that I get every day.''
So, in dealing with some of the dysfunctions, troublesome,
problematic, and damaging aspects of our cultural system, we are really
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necessarily, but simply a fresh approach to the liberal arts. The liberal
arts are conceived as what I call the liberating arts: conceived to liberate
the individual from a kind of unquestioning, unwitting dependance on
the everyday, local, parochial, and very often isolated cultural
environment and put the individual in touch with the great art, the
great science, the philosophies, and religions of human kind. That is
what the liberal arts were designed to do. Well, today much of that is
even on television. Television has some of the most magnificent
creations of our culture: maybe once a month, maybe once or twice a
year, maybe more often, depending on one's definition, but certainly
more often than ever before significant cultural programs are available
now on television, as well as in the schools. But what our children have
to be liberated from is the unwitting, unquestionable acceptance of a
very compelling and in many ways very attractive, insistent, repetitive
cultural environment every day, so that the analytical tools that we
teach and we learn in the liberal arts should be used to address the
everyday cultural environment in which our students live as a primary
core task of every level of education.
We spent much of this afternoon in discussing certain tactics of
how that might be done, and of course there are many ways of doing it,
but my proposition for those of you who are teachers is not to begin
with teaching or preaching. Our students think they know all about it:
they have grown up with it and they often know more about it than we
do. It's to say: We have a way of taking you on a journey of discovery,
a kind of a game, that will make even dull programs more interesting,
and to teach them a framework for analysis. It can be done on any
level, asking them to view with an analytical approach. You have
certain exercises which you can teach them to do by which they
discover on their own, which becomes much more memorable and
certainly much more convincing than anything that we can tell them to
begin with. They discover on their own that there are messages behind
the aggregate, and when you take a bird's eye view you discover things
about your very own home territory that you think you knew all about.
Same territory, different features, and you discover that these are
messages that you have been receiving without knowing all the time.
And then they begin to ask questions. It is at that point that we can
come in with the explanations, because at that point they are ready.
They are puzzled. They have discovered something on their own
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about something that they thought they knew all about, by asking
questions, and at that point we are ready to provide the explanations
and, of course, these are the exercises that keep on going and that
cultivate a habit of not only more selective viewing, we hope, but even
more important, more analytical, more critical viewing, reading, and so
on.
As citizens, I think we have another responsibility. The difference
between being good consumers and being citizens is that when you are
led into a cafeteria as a consumer, you are told, ``Here are these
wonderful dishes, and you are free to choose, so what's the problem?''
As a citizen, your question is not which to choose, but ``Is this the
kind of cafeteria we need?'' If we are to act as citizens at all, unless we
totally abdicate the notion of citizenship in a democratic society, we
have to act as the governors of our institutions, not as only the subjects.
We have all these new laws: whether it's laws of physics or laws of
chemistry, or laws of society, we are subject to these laws, but we don't
have to accept them, and we know, we must know, that ultimately
cultural production doesn't grow on trees, and even trees don't grow in
the wild. They are planted, they are artifacts, they are humanly
constructed by industrial formulas, by large scale cultural policies. In
fact, we have an invisible ministry of culture of a handful of men ─ and
I can tell you they are mostly men ─ whom we have never elected,
whose names we don't know, who are not accountable to us but to a
group of stockholders, who really determine what our children will see.
That is an unacceptable situation for a country of citizens. So, as
citizens I think we have to get organized. The difference between
consumer action and citizen action is that consumer action is
individual choice, individual families and so on; that's very important,
but isn't going to change the cafeteria by itself. Citizen action has to
become organized and policy-directed action.
It's for that reason that just a few years ago we launched a Cultural
Environment Movement (CEM), which is essentially an attempt to
build a national and international coalition of many groups. We had
our founding convention in March. Over 150 groups from 15
countries came. There are contacts and members from 63 countries
by now, because inevitably American media are global media: we can't
do it alone, and they can't do it without us. We have to put our own
house in order, but by putting our own house in order we are
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just another blueprint. That would defeat the very purpose. What we
have is a de facto censorship. We want to liberate the creative people
and all of us want to encourage more independent production, want to
provide resources for it, and want to create more diversity, which
doesn't mean that we will like everything that we see. That's not the
purpose. Or that it will be to any one type of taste. That's not the
purpose. But with greater diversity, all the different tastes and all the
different expectations will find something to their liking, and something
to represent them, to represent different groups, the actual reality of
the American scene and the world scene with some sense of equal
potential and equal dignity, which now simply doesn't exist, partly
because of the absence of large areas of life, partly because of the
stereotyping and distortions that are the most marketable.
So I hope that you will think about this, that you will take some of
this material that in a minute I will put out on the table, that you will
consider joining us in due time, and that right now you'll join us in a
discussion that is aimed both at analysis and at action, action to create a
cultural environment for our children that will be more equitable,
more fair, more diverse, and less damaging than what we have now.
Thank you very much.
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