Discursive Essay
“The Dark Sides of Cartoons”
In the early 21st century children become more and more abused by cartoons. Even parents themselves encourage their offspring to watch animated films. Commonly, we consider cartoons as sources of entertainment for our children to relax and have fun. However, we must ask ourselves are cartoons as innocent as we tend to think? This paper investigates the dark sides of cartoons, the sides which have a negative impact on children’s brains, while parents in most cases are unaware of this acute problem.
To begin with, both current and future parents would be surprised by the information that most research concentrates on the significant question of whether watching violent cartoons makes children and teenagers become more furious. According to Joanne Cantor, professor of the University of Wisconsin, there are dozens of psychological researches showing that learning often happens through imitation, and experts know that children imitate words and actions they watch on television from the very young age (http://yourmindonmedia.com/wpcontent/uploads/media_violence_paper.pdf).
According to Choma, et. al., (2004), the risk of self-injury among children increases by nearly 34% for every hour of violent cartoons viewed per day (http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/tcom/faculty/ha/tcom103fall2004/gp9/). To illustrate, think of the violence on “Tom & Jerry”, one of the most celebrated cartoons of all time. Parents understand that this masterpiece of animated film is far from educational. In fact, it injects violence to children’s fragile grey matter. Just think: Tom the cat tries to outfox Jerry the mouse, and in most cases Tom flattens, shatters, loses parts of his body etc. At a young age, this erroneous reality harmfully affects children, as they are more likely to have mental and emotional problems after watching alike cartoons which increase the risk of physical
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