Abstract: | SUMMARY The authors of this paper pose the question whether or not television has become the modern family hearth or gathering-place. The results of the investigations reported on, reveal that television viewing is primarily a family activity. It was also found that television viewing is not an exclusive act but that it is typically discontinuous and combined with other activities such as eating and talking. Television does not necessarily inhibit communication between family members: on the contrary, under certain circumstances it may serve as a strong stimulus to family communication. Television may therefore be said to have replaced the hearth or the dining-table as a gathering place for the family. |