Social Capital, Television, and the "Mean World": Trust, Optimism, and Civic Participation*
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] R. Putnam. Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital , 1995, The City Reader.
[2] Stephen F. Knack,et al. Civic Norms, Social Sanctions, and Voter Turnout , 1992 .
[3] K. Motamedi. The quality of American life , 1976 .
[4] Lyle,et al. Television in the Lives of Our Children , 1965 .
[5] E. Uslaner. Trust but verify: social capital and moral behavior , 1999 .
[6] R. Putnam,et al. Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy. , 1994 .
[7] W. James Potter,et al. The Relationships between First- and Second-Order Measures of Cultivation. , 1991 .
[8] Robert P. Hawkins,et al. UNIFORM MESSAGES AND HABITUAL VIEWING: UNNECESSARY ASSUMPTIONS IN SOCIAL REALITY EFFECTS , 1981 .
[9] L. B. Wright. The cultural life of the American colonies, 1607-1763 , 1957 .
[10] Henry E. Brady,et al. Voice and Equality: Civic Voluntarism in American Politics , 1996 .
[11] Kay Lehman Schlozman,et al. Race, Ethnicity and Political Resources: Participation in the United States , 1993, British Journal of Political Science.
[12] P. Norris. Does Television Erode Social Capital? A Reply to Putnam , 1996, PS: Political Science & Politics.
[13] M. Hughes,et al. The Fruits of Cultivation Analysis: A Reexamination of Some Effects of Television Watching , 1980 .
[14] K. Newton. Social Capital and Democracy , 1997 .
[15] Robert P. Hawkins,et al. Searching for Cognitive Processes in the Cultivation Effect Adult and Adolescent Samples in the United States and Australia , 1987 .
[16] V. Hodgkinson,et al. Giving and volunteering in the United States , 1990 .
[17] R. Putnam. Tuning In, Tuning Out: The Strange Disappearance of Social Capital in America , 1995, PS: Political Science & Politics.
[18] Morris Rosenberg,et al. MISANTHROPY AND POLITICAL IDEOLOGY , 1956 .
[19] George Comstock,et al. Television and Human Behavior , 1975 .
[20] Anthony N. Doob,et al. Television viewing and fear of victimization: Is the relationship causal? , 1979 .
[21] R. Geen. Television and aggression: Recent developments in research and theory. , 1994 .
[22] Ronald C. Tobey,et al. Making Science Our Own: Public Images of Science 1910-1955 , 1992 .
[23] Eric M. Uslaner,et al. The decline of comity in Congress , 1993 .
[24] J. Coleman. Foundations of Social Theory , 1990 .
[25] Steven J. Rosenstone,et al. Mobilization, participation, and democracy in America , 1993 .
[26] Seymour Feshbach,et al. Television and aggression , 1971 .
[27] H. Commager. The American Mind , 1950 .
[28] P. Hirsch. The “Scary World” of the Nonviewer and Other Anomalies , 1980 .
[29] F. Harris. Something Within: Religion as a Mobilizer of African-American Political Activism , 1994, The Journal of Politics.
[30] Donald J. Pierce,et al. Democracy in America , 2018, Princeton Readings in Political Thought.
[31] J. Bryant,et al. Effects of massive exposure to sexually oriented prime-time television programming on adolescents moral judgment. , 1994 .
[32] Acts of Compassion , 1991 .
[33] W. James Potter,et al. Perceived reality and the cultivation hypothesis , 1986 .
[34] N. Postman,et al. "Mix a Little Folly with Your Wisdom"--Horace@@@Children and Television.@@@Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business. , 1987 .
[35] Margaret Levi,et al. Social and Unsocial Capital: A Review Essay of Robert Putnam's Making Democracy Work , 1996 .
[36] Edwin B. Parker,et al. Television in the lives of our children , 1961 .
[37] R. Putnam. Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital , 1995 .
[38] R. Putnam. The strange disappearance of civic America , 1996 .
[39] W. Rahn,et al. Individual-Level Evidence for the Causes and Consequences of Social Capital , 1997 .
[40] L. Gross,et al. The “Mainstreaming” of America: Violence Profile No. 11 , 1980 .