1996, Laura Furman, Elinore Standard, Bookworms: Great Writers and Readers Celebrate Reading
Many TV and binary babies don't know or care about fairy tales and nursery rhymes. Language seems to slow them. "Screenagers" they've been called.
1999, Toby Daspit, John A. Weaver, Popular Culture and Critical Pedagogy: Reading, Constructing, Connecting
To a screenager, these are not opposing life strategies hut coordinated agents […]
1999, Darcy Gerbarg, The Economics, Technology and Content of Digital TV
The screenager sees how the entire mediaspace is a cooperative dream, made up of the combined projections of everyone who takes part.
2002 - Robert Latham, Consuming Youth: vampires, cyborgs, and the culture of consumption
According to Rushkoff, the screenager of today "is interacting with his world in at least as dramatically altered a fashion from his grandfather as the […]
2004, John Alberti, Leaving Springfield: The Simpsons and the Possibility of Oppositional Culture
Programs that celebrate the screenager's irreverence for the image while providing a […]
It is the ethos and behavior embodied by screenager role model and […]