The effect of animated Sci-Fi characters’ racial presentation on narrative engagement, wishful identification, and physical activity intention among children

Author:

Lu Amy Shirong1ORCID,Green Melanie C2,Alon Dar3

Affiliation:

1. Health Technology Lab, Department of Communication Studies, College of Arts, Media, and Design, Department of Health Sciences, Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University , Boston, MA 02115, USA

2. Department of Communication, University at Buffalo , Buffalo, NY 14260, USA

3. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University , Boston, MA 02115, USA

Abstract

Abstract Characters play an integral role in animated narratives, but their visual racial presentation has received limited attention. A diverse group of U.S. children watched a 15-min physical activity-promoting animated Sci-Fi narrative. They were randomly assigned to one of three conditions, which varied the lead characters’ racial presentation: realistic racially unambiguous (Original: White children, Black mother), realistic racially ambiguous (Ambiguous: All with brown skin without specified race/ethnicity), and fantastical racially ambiguous (Fantastical: All with brown skin with fantastical hair-and-eye color schemes). We assessed narrative engagement, wishful identification, and physical activity intention. Controlling for social desirability and multigroup ethnic identity, children who watched Fantastical characters showed significantly higher narrative engagement than those who watched Original characters, but they did not statistically differ from those who watched Ambiguous characters. Structural equation modeling indicated that narrative engagement and wishful identification fully mediated the racial representation effect (Fantastical vs. Original) on physical activity intention.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Northeastern University’s Interdisciplinary Research Sabbatical

College of Arts, Media, and Design

Bouvé College of Health Sciences at Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Communication

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