Is Wile E. Coyote a Bad
Influence on Children?
Judith A. Rowe
Violence in cartoons teaches children aggressive behavior and desensitizes
them to acts of violence. Children watch and understand television
in different ways, depending on the length of their attention span, the
way in which they process information, the amount of mental effort they
invest, and their own life experiences. Certain plot elements in
portrayals of violence are considered high risk for children. These
elements include characterizations in which the perpetrator is attractive
because viewers may identify with such a character, showing violence as
being justified, going unpunished, and having minimal consequences to the
victim.
Cartoon violence permeates children's programming. Violence toward
animals is rampant in Saturday morning children's programs, where more
than one-half of the animals depicted suffer overt physical violence.
These violence-saturated portrayals are not only dangerous to animals,
they are also misleading and detrimental to humane attitudes in general.
Most cartoons are constructed with vivid production features, which greatly
increases children's predisposition to violence.
Researchers have determined the following ways in which a violent cartoon
program may impact young viewers: It can encourage children
to learn aggressive behavior and attitudes; it can cultivate fearful and
pessimistic attitudes in children about the non-television world; and,
it can desensitize children to real-world and fantasy violence. According
to researcher Dr. George Gerbner, many studies have concluded that after
watching violence, children are more aggressive. Also, children who
watch violent cartoons are more likely to think of the world as a violent
and dangerous place.
It is society's and parents' responsibility to teach children the vast
difference between Wile E. Coyote blowing himself up in a Looney Tune and
what the real world experiences when violence occurs. Parents should
explain that these characters are drawn and not a character in a costume.
Society may not be able to stop the violence in cartoons and on television,
but it can stop the effects of it. “Even in cartoon violence, we
see victims that really don't die," writes clinical psychologist Evelyn
Kohan. “But people do die when they're shot with guns, and people
really do die when people hurt them in violent ways. Our children
have to know that."
It is certainly true that cartoon violence does not account for all
the causes of children's aggression. It is also true that some
children are a great deal more likely to be affected by television violence
than others, and it is these children who are likely to be potentially
more aggressive anyway. But the effect of cartoon and television
violence is to make these “at-risk" children even more aggressive than
they would otherwise be. And although the group especially at risk
might be a minority of viewers, they are likely to be the majority of aggressors.
This fact makes them, and the violent content of television, worthy of
our attention. Higher priority must be given to achieving a more
realistic and positive representation of animals on television. Such
reform would be a progressive step toward stemming society's 'culture of
violence' and its desensitization to the suffering of others.
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Judith A. Rowe is a student at MCLA