The situational and time-varying context of routines in television viewing: An event history analysis
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Henk Westerik
Abstract
Building on an action theoretical perspective, it is assumed that most television viewing is a routine response to frequently occurring situations, which together make up everyday life. This interplay between television viewing and everyday life was studied using data from a national survey among Dutch adults (n = 825) and their families. From this survey, data of 225 couples were analyzed using event history analysis. Results indicate that one cannot see television viewing as merely an alternative for other activities. For instance, participatory activities have two distinct effects: They tend to inhibit television viewing by the actor but stimulate television viewing by the actor’s partner. The effect of contacts with other variables appears to be important as well: Being at home, engagement in child care, household work, and eating and drinking often enhances television viewing. But presence of non-family may inhibit television viewing. Education was shown to have a consistently negative impact on television viewing, and there appeared to be some gender specific inducements for termination of television viewing.
© Walter de Gruyter
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- Rule Britannia! Britannia rules the waves: A cross-cultural study of five English-speaking versions of a British quiz show format
- The situational and time-varying context of routines in television viewing: An event history analysis
- The gendered relationship between journalism and public relations in Austria and Germany. A feminist approach
- Bridging or bonding? Relationships between integration and media use among ethnic minorities in the Netherlands
- Psychological distress, perceived social support, and television viewing for reasons of companionship: A test of the compensation hypothesis in a population of crime victims
- Marginality in the information age: Is the gender gap really diminishing?
- Book Reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- Rule Britannia! Britannia rules the waves: A cross-cultural study of five English-speaking versions of a British quiz show format
- The situational and time-varying context of routines in television viewing: An event history analysis
- The gendered relationship between journalism and public relations in Austria and Germany. A feminist approach
- Bridging or bonding? Relationships between integration and media use among ethnic minorities in the Netherlands
- Psychological distress, perceived social support, and television viewing for reasons of companionship: A test of the compensation hypothesis in a population of crime victims
- Marginality in the information age: Is the gender gap really diminishing?
- Book Reviews