Quote:
Yes, actually, it has been studied and documented without question that children who watch more violent shows and play more violent games are more agressive and involved in fights more than their peers who don't. The comparison to prostitiution is an apple and oranges comparison, IMHO.
I took a class on childrens literature in college, and it was fascinating. Children were exposed to death, disease, and violence at a much higher rate back then. The intent of fairy tales is to give children and outlet to deal with their own scary feelings and thoughts. They process the story to come to terms with their own fears. You can actually use them for therapy. And yes, some of the stories were definatley intended to "scare them straight".
It's all about striking a balance between exposing a child to scary things (I don't insulate my child from scary images, but I watch him and make sure he is okay when they do come up) and letting them work through it, while not making them numb to it and thinking that it is acceptable to mistreat others.
And I'm sure it totally factors in the fact that people who enjoy those kinds of things are probably more violent ANYWAY.
People watch and play what they prefer, violent people prefer violent media, just like nerds prefer games and movies that require thought.
Yes, actually, it has been studied and documented without question that children who watch more violent shows and play more violent games are more agressive and involved in fights more than their peers who don't. The comparison to prostitiution is an apple and oranges comparison, IMHO.
I took a class on childrens literature in college, and it was fascinating. Children were exposed to death, disease, and violence at a much higher rate back then. The intent of fairy tales is to give children and outlet to deal with their own scary feelings and thoughts. They process the story to come to terms with their own fears. You can actually use them for therapy. And yes, some of the stories were definatley intended to "scare them straight".
It's all about striking a balance between exposing a child to scary things (I don't insulate my child from scary images, but I watch him and make sure he is okay when they do come up) and letting them work through it, while not making them numb to it and thinking that it is acceptable to mistreat others.
And I'm sure it totally factors in the fact that people who enjoy those kinds of things are probably more violent ANYWAY.
