Theorizing the addressive audience in children’s digital video production

Title

Theorizing the addressive audience in children’s digital video production

Description

In this article, we examine how children ages 8 to 10 characterized the audiences of digital videos they made in school. Children’s perceptions of their viewers reflected, and in many cases complicated, current theorizing about the vast potential audiences of digital texts. Our analysis of videos and interview data surfaces several findings pertaining to how children characterized their audiences. Children discussed their desire to inform viewers, their deliberate choices about language use vis-à-vis their viewers, ways they predicted and steered audience emotions, and the affective dimensions of sharing one’s video with different audiences. These findings suggest that educators and researchers ought to foreground issues of addressivity when theorizing the question of audience for children’s digital products. They also raise questions concerning authentic audience in an age of increasing concern about children’s safety and security in online worlds.

Fresno State author

Format

article

Citation Info

Pandya, J. Z., & Low, D. E. (2020). Theorizing the addressive audience in children’s digital video production. Written Communication, 37(1), 41–68. https://doi.org/10.1177/0741088319880509

Files

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Citation

“Theorizing the addressive audience in children’s digital video production,” Outstanding Faculty Publications, accessed April 29, 2024, https://facpub.library.fresnostate.edu/items/show/240.