Television and a place called home
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temporality derived from Edward Hall (1973). His distinction between
monochromatic time (emphasising schedules, segmentation and promptness)
and polychromatic time (characterised by several things happening at once)
provides the basis for a study designed to enquire into television’s integration
into the particular temporalities of different families. An understanding of the
dynamics of the distinct character of a family’s temporality provides a clear
route, Bryce argues, into an understanding of television’s place in family life:
Television viewing, like all other family activities, cannot escape the power
of the family’s organisation of time… The sequencing of viewing, its place
in the mesh of family activities, reflects a choice, an organisation, a
negotiation process about which very little is known.
(Bryce, 1987, 122–3)
Whereas Jennifer Bryce focuses on the quality of time use within the family,
David Morley (1986) focuses on the quality of gender relations within the family.
Two concerns link them. The first is with the way in which a dominant pattern
of social organisation in the family structures the household’s relationship to
television, and the second concerns the relationship between the private
expression of time and gender and its public articulation. Morley explores gender
and power within the family. Across a whole range of finely tuned dimensions
of viewing practice (the power and control over programme choice, viewing
style, the planning or unplanning of viewing, the amounts of viewing, television
related talk, programme and channel preference, solo and ‘guilty’ viewing) he
finds a significant difference between men and women in the families he studies.
He interprets this in an important way, arguing that such differences are not to
be related to biology but to the particular character of gender relations that have
emerged within patriarchal society, as a result of which the home itself has become
highly gendered. Men dominate the television at home because home is where
they relax, where they are looked after, and where, after a long day’s work, they
bring their own publicly legitimated masculinity into the woman’s working
domain. That gender is a significant factor in the domestic relations around the
television set is undeniable, but as Morley himself acknowledges (1986, 174),
not by itself and not unproblematically. The stage a family has reached in its
life-cycle, the significance of age, class and ethnicity as well as gender, and the
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