Author:
Wilson Claire,Nairn Raymond,Coverdale John,Panapa Aroha
Abstract
BackgroundThere are no published studies concerning the depiction of mental illness in children's television programmes.AimsTo determine whether mental illness was depicted in children's television.MethodSample of one complete week of children's television (57 hours, 50 minutes; 128 series episodes: 69 cartoon animations, 12 non-cartoon animations, 47 real life) provided for children under the age of 10 years. Disclosure analysis of portrayals of mental illness through repeated viewings identified patterns in the use of linguistic, semiotic and rhetorical resources.ResultsOf the 128 episodes, 59 (46%) contained one or more references to mental illness, predominantly in cartoons (n=47, 80%) compared with other episode types (χ2=17.1, d.f.=2, P<0.05). Commonly occurring terms such as ‘crazy’ (n=28), ‘mad’ (n=19) and ‘losing your mind’ (n=13) were employed to denote loss of control. The six consistently mentally ill characters were almost entirely devoid of admirable attributes.ConclusionYoung viewers are being socialised into stigmatising conceptions of mental illness.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
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