ABSTRACT

Unlike many children’s television shows, Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood did more than simply entertain or occupy children’s attention. The show educated them in the affective domain, encouraging such things as appreciation for difference, collaboration, self-expression, and self-worth. It also introduced them to the areas of culture, art, and music through guests, trips, art objects and processes, and demonstrations, making it accessible and meaningful in a way that a child could understand. While the educational content of children’s television programming has improved greatly since the late 1960s, no other children’s program has ever attempted such a mix of high art, low art, folk art, industrial production, learning in the affective and social domains, and more, all with a whimsical sense of humor, insight, and a level of interconnected detail unmatched by any other children’s television program. This book illuminates and examines the world of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood through world design, narrative, genre, form, content, authorship, reception and more.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |88 pages

Welcome to the Neighborhood

chapter |13 pages

The Neighborhoods

Interconnected Spaces and Places

chapter |50 pages

The Neighbors

A Diverse Sociological and Ontological Spectrum

chapter |14 pages

“And I’ll Have More Ideas for You”

Ideology and the Neighborhood

chapter |9 pages

Mister Rogers’ Legacy

chapter |4 pages

List of Episodes