"A balanced yet biting critique . . . Gitlin is a savvy guide to
our increasingly kinetic times."--"San Francisco Chronicle" In this
original look at our electronically glutted, speed-addicted world,
Todd Gitlin evokes a reality of relentless sensation, instant
transition, and nonstop stimulus, which he argues is anything but
progress. He shows how all media, all the time fuels celebrity
worship, paranoia, and irony, and how attempts to ward off the
onrush become occasion for yet more media. Far from bringing about
a "new information age," Gitlin argues, the digital torrent has
fostered a society of disposable emotions and casual commitments,
and threatens to make democracy a sideshow. In a new afterword,
Gitlin takes measure of the most recent wave of inundation in the
form of iPods, blogs, and YouTube. Both a startling analysis and a
charged polemic, "Media Unlimited" reveals the unending stream of
manufactured images and sounds as a defining feature of our
civilization and a perverse culmination of Western hopes for
freedom. Todd Gitlin is a professor of journalism and sociology at
Columbia University and the author of twelve other books, including
"The Sixties," "Inside Prime Time," "The Twilight of Common
Dreams," and "The Bulldozer and the Big Tent." He lives in New York
City.
In this look at our electronically glutted, speed-addicted
world, Todd Gitlin evokes a reality of relentless sensation,
instant transition, and nonstop stimulus, which he argues is
anything but progress. He shows how all media, all the time fuels
celebrity worship, paranoia, and irony, and how attempts to ward
off the onrush become occasion for yet more media. Far from
bringing about a "new information age," Gitlin argues, the digital
torrent has fostered a society of disposable emotions and casual
commitments, and threatens to make democracy a sideshow. In a new
afterword, Gitlin takes measure of the most recent wave of
inundation in the form of iPods, blogs, and YouTube.
Both a startling analysis and a charged polemic, "Media
Unlimited" reveals the unending stream of manufactured images and
sounds as a defining feature of our civilization and a perverse
culmination of Western hopes for freedom. "We owe a profound thanks
to Todd Gitlin for opening our eyes to a phenomenon that is so
omnipresent it can seem invisible. Media is not just what we see on
TV, it is the infrastructure in which we live our lives, not just
'content' but environment. Gitlin is our expert environmental guide
through this modern wilderness, a place where rivers flow with
projected images, forests are thickets of sounds, and the sky is
filled with advertisements."--Naomi Klein, author of "No Logo" "A
balanced yet biting critique . . . Gitlin is a savvy guide to our
increasingly kinetic times--part of the torrent that's worth
listening to."--"San Francisco Chronicle" "We owe a profound thanks
to Todd Gitlin for opening our eyes to a phenomenon that is so
omnipresent it can seem invisible. Media is not just what we see on
TV, it is the infrastructure in which we live our lives, not just
'content' but environment. Gitlin is our expert environmental guide
through this modern wilderness, a place where rivers flow with
projected images, forests are thickets of sounds, and the sky is
filled with advertisements."--Naomi Klein, author of "No Logo"
"Here it is: the biggest cultural question of our time. How are we
to live in 'the torrent'--the never-ceasing, never-slowing flow of
mass-produced words and sounds and images that these days makes up
nearly the entirety of human experience? Todd Gitlin traces all the
arguments, tests all the responses, and suggests a verdict that is
both intelligent and humane."--Thomas Frank, author of "One Market
Under God" "This is a wise book, well-informed and well-observed.
If the media torrent doesn't sweep us all away, it will be in part
because Todd Gitlin has so lucidly (and wittily) encouraged us to
keep our heads, and use them."--Mark Crispin Miller, author of "The
Bush Dyslexicon" and "Boxed In" "At once savvy and impassioned,
Todd Gitlin writes with inner-sanctum authority about how our newly
ramified systems, computers and media, are transfiguring our
accepted sense of the world. He is one of the disciplined, one of
the unenchanted: He gets it frighteningly right."--Sven Birkerts,
author of "The Gutenberg Elegies" "Many of us, when reading books
of extraordinary acuity, feel the need to put exclamation points in
the margins when we've read something that sweeps us up with its
brilliance. Gitlin's work always does this, but "Media Unlimited"
might be his most demanding of margin-defacement. "Media Unlimited"
is enthralling; it's actually a page-turner, and its unbroken chain
of plain and unavoidable truths make it essential--and, happily,
vastly entertaining--reading."--Dave Eggers, author of "A
Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius" "Admirable . . . Gitlin
shares a theologian's sense of the profound, a judge's eye for
equity, and an activist's hankering for the microphone . . . The
media are no longer just the message or the massage: they are just
us."--"Newsday" "Gitlin, a longtime student of society and media
begins his latest book with the premise that the media are a
central part of contemporary everyday life. He speculates that the
common error of referring to the media in the singular reflects our
experience of what seems to be a seamless entity. The prevalence of
media makes it impossible to separate the stream of images,
stories, and sounds from daily life. Focusing on the big picture,
Gitlin traces the role of media in making life in the modern world
bearable. The consequences of living in this artificial world of
'disposable feelings' is a disengagement from social and political
involvement. Gitlin categorizes individual styles of navigating
media into those of the fans, the paranoids, the exhibitionists,
the ironists, the jammers, the secessionists, and the
abolitionists. He does not advocate a particular style, nor does he
argue that we can or should return to an earlier time. He simply
asks that we step back and reflect on the media as a central
condition of our entire way of life."--Judy Solberg, George
Washington University Library, Washington, DC, "Library Journal"
"Gitlin, a professor of journalism and culture, examines why and
how it has come about that so much of our time is spent being
bombarded by communications, information, and entertainment from a
variety of media. Gitlin wants to avoid the typical analysis of the
effects of the media on society and, instead, looks at the media as
an experience in itself, with no definitive meaning necessarily
attached, analyzing the feelings elicited by a stream of
information. He concedes that his objective is a gamble, but it
pays off. Citing observations by Marx, de Tocqueville, Orwell, and
a stream of others, Gitlin offers a short, dizzying history of how
we got to the point where we are supersaturated with a torrent of
information coming at us a
General
Imprint: |
St. Martins Press-3pl
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
September 2007 |
First published: |
September 2007 |
Authors: |
Todd Gitlin
|
Dimensions: |
218 x 142 x 18mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
272 |
Edition: |
Revised and Rev |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8050-8689-8 |
Categories: |
Books >
Reference & Interdisciplinary >
Communication studies >
Media studies
|
LSN: |
0-8050-8689-7 |
Barcode: |
9780805086898 |
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