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In the present-day Tower of Babylon-the all-encompassing virtual
world built of image layered upon image-children are the most
vulnerable users. If we permit them unfettered access to media that
promotes corporate and consumer values, while suppressing their
cognitive development and creative imagination, then an
'imaginationless generation' may be our grim and inevitable future.
This book takes the reader, whether an academic, a parent or an
educator, through a startling journey from the harms lurking in the
virtual worlds-to children's health and well-being, to how they
deal with representations of violence and sexuality, as well as
exposure to cyberbullying, advertising, Internet Addiction
Disorder, and even exploitation. The most dangerous harm is unseen,
and affects the innermost realm of a child's psyche: the
imagination. The authors discuss the current global regulatory
framework that makes the protection of children ever more
challenging. They discuss lessons learned from the ways that courts
have negotiated free speech issues, as well as the research on
parental mediation of children's Internet use in the home. Finally,
they move towards a bold new attempt at understanding regulation,
by drawing lessons for new media from ancient culture. In The
Imagionationless Generation, the authors pioneer an attempt to
address the real harms that children face in virtual realities by
presenting a new and paradigm shifting theory-the Media Engagement.
They follow the theory's insights and predictions to offer a new
perspective on a burning question of our time-how to protect
children online. This multidisciplinary intellectual voyage and its
insights are only possible by standing on the shoulders of scholars
who have gone before, such as Ellul, Baudrillard, McLuhan, Postman
and Piaget, to name a few. As academics, parents and concerned
human beings, the authors present here the results of more than
twenty years of research in a way that should appeal to a wide
variety of readers, as they stretch our understanding of the
human-machine interface beyond right and wrong. This book shapes
our understanding of media in the digital age in much the same way
that McLuhan's Understanding Media did for a previous generation.
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