Livre - Amazing ourselves to death

070 STR

Description

Livre

Peter Lang

Strate Lance

Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (xv, 170 pages)

Dimensions : 23 cm

Neil Postman’s most popular work, Amusing Ourselves to Death (1985), provided an insightful critique of the effects of television on public discourse in America, arguing that television’s bias towards entertaining content trivializes serious issues and undermines the basis of democratic culture. Lance Strate, who earned his doctorate under Neil Postman and is one of the leading media ecology scholars of our time, re-examines Postman’s arguments, updating his analysis and critique for the twenty-first-century media environment that includes the expansion of television programming via cable and satellite as well as the Internet, the web, social media, and mobile technologies. Integrating Postman’s arguments about television with his critique of technology in general, Strate considers the current state of journalism, politics, religion, and education in American culture. Strate also contextualizes Amusing Ourselves to Death through an examination of Postman’s life and career and the field of media ecology that Postman introduced. This is a book about our prospects for the future, which can only be based on the ways in which we think and talk about the present.

Acknowledgments, p. ix Foreword, p. xi PART ONE Chapter 1. Fatal Amusements, p. 3 Chapter 2. Building on a Bridge to Neil Postman, p. 15 Chapter 3. Media Ecology as a Scholary Activity, p. 43 Chapter 4. The Evolving American Media Environment, p. 59 PART TWO Chapter 5. Breaking the News, p. 85 Chapter 6. The Tribe Has Spoken, p. 101 Chapter 7. Neon Gods, p. 113 Chapter 8. Grand Theft Education, p. 125 Chapter 9. The Tempest, p. 135 References, p. 147 Index, p. 157