Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show BusinessTelevision has conditioned us to tolerate visually entertaining material measured out in spoonfuls of time, to the detriment of rational public discourse and reasoned public affairs. In this eloquent, persuasive book, Neil Postman alerts us to the real and present dangers of this state of affairs, and offers compelling suggestions as to how to withstand the media onslaught. Before we hand over politics, education, religion, and journalism to the show business demands of the television age, we must recognize the ways in which the media shape our lives and the ways we can, in turn, shape them to serve out highest goals. |
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... York University and founder of its program in Media Ecology . Educated at the State University of New York and Columbia University , he is holder of the Christian Lindback Award for Excellence in Teaching and is also editor of Et Cetera ...
... York University and founder of its program in Media Ecology . Educated at the State University of New York and Columbia University , he is holder of the Christian Lindback Award for Excellence in Teaching and is also editor of Et Cetera ...
Page 59
... York . There is a very good Fulling - Mill , to be Let or Sold , as also a Plantation , having on it a large new Brick house , and another good house by it for a Kitchen & workhouse , with a Barn , Stable & c . a young Orchard and 20 ...
... York . There is a very good Fulling - Mill , to be Let or Sold , as also a Plantation , having on it a large new Brick house , and another good house by it for a Kitchen & workhouse , with a Barn , Stable & c . a young Orchard and 20 ...
Page 74
... York Daily Mirror and Daily News , the picture forced exposition into the background , and in some instances obliter- ated it altogether . By the end of the nineteenth century , adver- tisers and newspapermen had discovered that a ...
... York Daily Mirror and Daily News , the picture forced exposition into the background , and in some instances obliter- ated it altogether . By the end of the nineteenth century , adver- tisers and newspapermen had discovered that a ...
Contents
The Medium Is the Metaphor | 3 |
Media as Epistemology | 16 |
Typographic America | 30 |
Copyright | |
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advertising Aldous Huxley America amusing argument audience become believe Billy Graham called celebrities Charles Finney claims classroom coherent communication conversation course created culture Diff'rent Strokes Douglas eighteenth entertainment epistemology example exposition fact Frye Huxley idea implied intellectual irrelevant Jerry Falwell Jimmy Swaggart language learning Lincoln-Douglas debates literacy Marshall McLuhan matter means medium ment merely metaphor Mimi mind movie nature newscaster newspaper nineteenth century oral Orwell Pat Robertson photograph play preachers President printed word printing press problem public discourse question radio rational readers reason religion religious Reverend Robert Schuller rock music sense serious Sesame Street show business sion social speech story symbolic tele telegraph television commercial television program television screen television show television's thing tion tradition truth typographic viewers visual Walter Ong watch writing written word York