Issue Details: First known date: 2015... 2015 Disciplining the Screen through Education : The Royal Commission into the Moving Picture Industry in Australia
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'In this article, we investigate the complex relationship between concerns about children and young people's exposure to cinema in 1920s Australia and the use of film in education. In part, the Royal Commission into the Moving Picture Industry in Australia aimed to ‘ascertain the effect and the extent of the power of film upon juveniles’ and Commissioners spoke to educationalists, psychologists, medical professions, police officers and parents to gain insight into the impacts of movies on children. Numerous issues were canvassed in the Commission hearings such as exposure to sexual content, ‘excesses’ in film content, children's inability to concentrate at school following cinema attendance and the influence of cinema on youth crime. While the Commission ultimately suggested it was parents’ role to police children's engagements with cinema, it did make recommendations for restricting children's access to films with inappropriate themes. Meanwhile, the Commission was very positive about film's educational role stating that ‘the advantage to be gained by the use of the cinematograph as an adjunct to educational methods should be assisted in every possible way by the Commonwealth’. We draw on the Commission's minutes of evidence, the Commission report and newspaper articles from the 1920s to the 1940s to argue that the Commission provides valuable insight into the beginnings of the use of screen content in formal schooling, both as a resource across the curriculum and as a specific focus of education through film appreciation and, later, broader forms of media education. The article argues debates about screen entertainment and education rehearsed in the Commission are reflected today as parents, concerned citizens and educators ponder the dangers and potential of new media technologies and media content used by children and young people such as video games, social media and interactive content.' (Publication abstract)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Re-evaluating the Royal Commission into the Australian Moving Picture Industry, 1927–28 vol. 9 no. 3 2015 9156791 2015 periodical issue 2015 pg. 298-311
Last amended 17 Dec 2015 10:58:00
298-311 Disciplining the Screen through Education : The Royal Commission into the Moving Picture Industry in Australiasmall AustLit logo Studies in Australasian Cinema
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