George Gerbner (August 8, 1919 – December 24, 2005) was a professor of Communication and the founder of cultivation theory.
Born in Budapest, Hungary, he immigrated to the United States in late 1939. Gerbner earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley in 1942. He worked briefly for the San Francisco Chronicle as a writer, columnist and assistant financial editor. He joined the US Army in 1943. He joined the Office of Strategic Services while serving and received the Bronze Star. He has personally identified and arrested the fascist Hungarian Prime Minister who was subsequently executed. Gerbner was honorably discharged as a First Lieutenant. After the war he worked as a freelance writer and publicist and taught journalism at El Camino College while earning a master's (1951) and doctorate (1955) in communications at the University of Southern California. His dissertation, "Toward a General Theory of Communication," won USC's award for "best dissertation."
He had been Dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania (1964-1989), and presided over the school's growth and influence in Communication Theory in academia. After leaving Annenberg, he became the Bell Atlantic Professor of Telecommunication at Temple University in 1997.
Gerbner established the Cultural Indicators Research Project in 1968 to document trends in television content and how these changes affect viewers' perceptions of the world. He coined the phrase "mean world syndrome" to describe the fact that people who watch large amounts of television are more likely to perceive the world as a dangerous and frightening place.[1]
Gerbner testified before a Congressional subcommittee on communications in 1981. He said that "fearful people are more dependent, more easily manipulated and controlled, more susceptible to deceptively simple, strong, tough measures and hard-line postuires....They may accept and even welcome repression if it promises to relieve their insecurities." [2]
He taught at Temple University, Villanova University, and the University of Pennsylvania. After leaving Penn in 1990, he founded the Cultural Environment movement, an advocacy group promoting greater diversity in communication media. [3]
Gerbner was diagnosed with cancer in late November, 2005, and died on December 24, 2005 at his apartment in center city Philadelphia.
Since 2010, an annual conference on Communication, Conflict, and Aggression has been held in Budapest in honor of the late Dr. Gerbner. The conference is co-organized by Dr. Jolan Roka of the Budapest College of Communication and Dr. Rebecca M. Chory of West Virginia University's Department of Communication Studies.