Living and Learning across Stages and Places: How Transitions Inform Audience Members’ Understandings of Pop Culture and Health Care

Auteurs-es

  • Kaela Jubas University of Calgary
  • Dawn E. B. Johnston University of Calgary
  • Angie Chiang University of Calgary

Mots-clés :

Public Pedagogy, Informal Adult Learning, Health Care Policy, Grey's Anatomy

Résumé

Using the medical drama Grey's Anatomy as an examplar, this article discusses findings from a qualitative case study exploring impacts of popular (or pop) culture on Canadian audience members' understandings of social issues, particularly health care policy. Adopting a neo-Gramscian perspective, our fundamental premise is that pop culture operates pedagogically, and that cultural consumption informs audience members' understandings of current social issues. We use the word "transition" to structure our discussion, and employ it in a dual sense - as progression from one stage of life to another, and as movement from one place to another. After positioning our study in relation to relevant scholarship in the field of adult education and outlining the theoretical perspective in which our work is grounded, we present our findings, and conclude with some suggestions of how this inquiry can contribute to understanding adult learning in contemporary times and places.

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Publié-e

2014-02-18

Comment citer

Jubas, K., Johnston, D. E. B., & Chiang, A. (2014). Living and Learning across Stages and Places: How Transitions Inform Audience Members’ Understandings of Pop Culture and Health Care. La Revue Canadienne Pour l’étude De l’éducation Des Adultes, 26(1), 57–75. Consulté à l’adresse https://cjsae.library.dal.ca/cjsae/article/view/2907