Cocuk: 09.avi
The ".avi" file format was the standard for digital video during the late 1990s and early 2000s, a period that marked the shift from television and physical media (like VHS or VCDs) to early internet file-sharing. Files labeled in the "COCUK" series typically represent a digitized archive of:
In the Turkish context, the transition from communal storytelling to individual screen time represented a significant shift in how "generational trauma" and "social injustice" were processed and communicated to the youth Viddsee . Where traditional stories were told by a parent or grandparent—allowing for dialogue—a video file like "09.avi" delivers a fixed narrative that requires external mediation to be truly educational. Sociocultural Implications of the "Avi" Era COCUK 09.avi
"COCUK 09.avi" is more than just a video file; it is a digital artifact of a specific era in Turkish history. It represents the intersection of technology, national identity, and childhood pedagogy. While it offered convenience for parents and a sense of cultural continuity, it also heralded the beginning of the "digital society" challenges that contemporary criminology and psychology now seek to address, including the "risk perception" of digital content and the need for "intercultural awareness" in a globalized world ResearchGate ERIC . Sociocultural Implications of the "Avi" Era "COCUK 09