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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper declares the television is our most prominent cultural artifact. It is not just a means of entertainment, it is actually shaping our culture. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP681860.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Television: A Popular Cultural Artifact Research
Compiled by 11/2010 Please
Modern culture is replete with a diversity of what could be described as cultural artifacts. Consider, for example, the telephone, the computer, CDs, DVDs, and microwaves. All of
these are very much cultural artifacts. By far the most important cultural artifact in popular culture, however, is the television.
Televisions are not only a commonly used item in American lives and in fact the lives of much of the more technologically advanced regions of the world, televisions play an
incredibly important role in shaping those lives. We are, in fact, being force fed our fashions, our foods, our entertainment, our religions, and our politics via the ever present
hum of our digital world (Sammon, 2005; Entwistle, 2000). Televisions first made their advent to popular culture after World War II.
The technological advancements that were made during that war are to be credited with that advent. Televisions quickly engrained themselves into practically every component of our lifeways.
Television is one of the primary forms of recreation in the United States and indeed in the industrial world. Within the United States there is at least one television
in practically every household. Many households include multiple sets. When we think of cultural artifacts we typically think
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