"Can we fix it?": Bob the Builder as a discursive resource for children
Date
2010
Authors
Freed, Brianna, author
Broadfoot, Kirsten, advisor
Aoki, Eric, advisor
Harvey, Ashley, committee member
Aoki, Eric, committee member
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Abstract
This thesis examines the discourses and representations constructed in the popular children's television series Bob the Builder--a discursive resource that engages work as its central theme. Through a critical cultural lens, the study uses critical discourse analysis and visual semiotics to explore the constructions of work/er, organization, non-work activities, family, gender, and diversity as they are (re)presented in the show. The study found that Bob the Builder distinctly (re)presents values of the postmodern, postindustrial worker of Western, advanced corporate capitalism. Leisure and play are portrayed as activities which, ideally, do not affect work. Family is equally placed in the periphery as family members are either placed entirely outside the organization--as with Wendy's family--or as contributing members to its operation--as with Bob's family. Gender representations are problematized by Wendy's denied occupational identity as a builder equal to her male counterpart. Diversity in the show is problematic with minimal non-White ethnic representation and two overtly stereotypical representations of supporting characters. Directions for future research are offered in the conclusion.
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Rights Access
Subject
discursive resources
Bob the Builder
children's media
leisure
western work
work identity