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An Investigation of the Impact of Animated Cartoons on Children in Nairobi

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dc.contributor.author Kidenda, Mary Claire Akinyi
dc.date.accessioned 2021-06-09T06:48:41Z
dc.date.available 2021-06-09T06:48:41Z
dc.date.issued 2021-06-09
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1785
dc.description Masters Thesis en_US
dc.description.abstract This thesis is about cartoon-consumer relationship in an effort to discover the impacts of animated cartoons on children in Nairobi. It is hoped that the findings and conclusions herein will help generate cartoons that can educate Kenyan children to live in ways that are socially and culturally desirable. Kenya has, in the last ten or so years, witnessed rapid growth in the number of television channels and satellite television. The television channels and satellite television have availed to children a vast amount of animated cartoons that transmit European, Japanese and North American views of life instead of the realities in which Kenya children live. This research was carried out in Nairobi, to find out whether or not animated cartoons have an impact on children aged seven to eleven years. Before achieving this primary objective, it was important to first find out which animated cartoons children watch and how regularly they watch the cartoons. It was also essential to first view the roles parents’ play in encouraging or discouraging their children who watch animated cartoons. Casual observation, a general survey, questionnaires, face-to-face interviews and focus group discussions were methods used to gather data for analysis. The analysis of data shows that children in Nairobi watch a lot of cartoon programs during the week, over the weekends and during school holidays; entertainment is the primary reason why children watch animated cartoons. Analysis also reveals that parents do not monitor their children’s viewing habits and, consequently, have little knowledge of the content of the animated cartoons their children watch. Parents appear to assume that cartoons are “innocent” and are “good for children.” This research reveals that 55.6 % of the 426 respondents say that they did not talk about cartoons with their parents and 92% said they did not discuss animated cartoons with their teachers. Without guidance, the majority of children appear to assume that all animated cartoon is good. A good number of the children cannot pinpoint bad aspects of animated cartoons but were able to clearly state what they perceived to be “good” things in and about animated cartoons. Overall, the research established that Non-African ideals of beauty and image dominate animated cartoons aired on television programs in Nairobi. Children are excellent imitators but poor evaluators. This study suggests that animated cartoons have discernible impacts on children in Nairobi in that they influence the children to construct their worldview and create perceptions that are alien to Kenya. The Non African ideals and values are increasingly defining the perception and attitudes towards gender roles, sexuality, body images and role modelling of children who consume animated cartoons in Nairobi. This is because these children are in that stage where images and impressions from diverse environments play a big part in how they construct their world. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Technical University of Kenya en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Animated Cartoons en_US
dc.title An Investigation of the Impact of Animated Cartoons on Children in Nairobi en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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