Ask Question
25 March, 10:56

How did television reflect and reinforce the idea of the nuclear family in the postwar period?

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 25 March, 14:43
    0
    In America in the postwar period, popular television certainly reinforced the idea - and ideal - of the American, nuclear family. Television reinforced these ideas by regularly - often in situation comedy shoes - by presenting American families as consisting of a mother, father, and at least three children, in turn celebrating and inventing, in a sense, the "ideal" of the American family. The family, then, was presented as being a workable and healthy social unit that served to promote American values such as prosperity, strict gender norms, and the acceptance of American superiority over the ideals of other cultures and any sort of alternative lifestyle or way of being.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “How did television reflect and reinforce the idea of the nuclear family in the postwar period? ...” in 📙 History if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers